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A57537 A godly & fruitful exposition upon all the First epistle of Peter by that pious and eminent preacher of the word of God, John Rogers. Rogers, John, 1572?-1636.; Simpson, Sidrach, 1600?-1655. 1650 (1650) Wing R1808; ESTC R32411 886,665 744

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of these things but faintly and from the teeth outward and not from the heart as others but for any to boast of great matters done for them and yet shew no whit that they be ravished with love to God neither breaking out into his praises in words nor shewing it in their lives they do certainly lye and deceive their own souls for they that have had experience of the sowre and of the sweet cannot but speak I believed therefore have I spoken saith David Impossible it is for any man to think of his Election Redemption Calling c. And not be ravished therewith It 's our duty then to stir up our selves often and from time to time by the deep meditation of Gods special Mercies which as it will shake off dulness so will it much revive us to duty And Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Mark that he cannot speak of God but with some token of reverence and title of his Thus as he is elswhere stiled The God of Hope the God of Peace the God of Patience and Consolation the King everlasting so is he here the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. His practise must be our patren we must never think or speak of the holy and blessed name of God but with all high reverence his greatness compared with our baseness might induce us hereunto This condemneth as well the Blasphemy of Swearers as the unreverent takers of Gods Name in vain after what maner soever He is termed the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ not only nor so much in respect of his Manhood viz. that he took the lump whereof his humanity was framed which was of the substance of the Virgin and first Sanctified and freed the same from all stain or blemish of Original corruption and actually United it from the first conception thereof to the Godhead and second person and so framed the humanity of Christ of this substance and infused into him a reasonable soul but especially in respect of his Godhead by an unspeakable communicating of the whole essence of the Father to him before all worlds which mystery though we cannot fully understand we must believe and adore Here he is stiled the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ as formerly he was wont to be called and known by the name of the God of Abraham Isaac and Jacob to distinguish him from all false gods whereby he sheweth himself more cleerly to us and the way how we should get into his favor namely by his son there being no other way whereby our persons or service can please God If therefore we would obtain any thing at Gods hands we must not come barely to the Father as for forgiveness of sins mercy or any thing else but with respect of his son Jesus Christ by whom only he is and will be merciful unto us Speak we something of his three titles 1. Jesus a Savior so called by an Angel from Heaven ere he was born for that he was to save his people from their sins who is an absolute and sufficient Savior yea the only Savior neither is there was there or shall there be any other 2. Christ anointed to be our King Priest and Prophet through whom we are made Kings Priests and Prophets If so 1. Where be our sacrifices of our selves of Prayer and Praise Morning and Evening in our Families a Priest must not be without sacrifice 2. As Prophets do we teach our Families do we instruct and examine them 3. As Kings do we master our affections If we be led Captive of our frowardness worldliness and the like what Kings are we Look to it 3. Our Lord. He is our Lord every way by purchase and by conquest He bought us with his precious blood He also conquered all the Enemies that held us captive Sin Satan Death and so delivered us If any great man would by money ransom or by his sword rescue out of his Enemies hands any captive he were his Lord so is Christ our Lord either way Whence ariseth 1. Comfort to all that know themselves redeemed by him that he will never lose that which he hath so dearly bought and taken such pains with every way to come into the world to die for us then so to work as we may come to the knowledge of it by his Word and Spirit Whereby Faith and Sanctification are wrought in us 2. Instruction it s our duty to submit our selves to him as our liege-Liege-lord to be his loyal people we must kiss the son take up his yoke He hath paid full dearly for our service and love his we are being now no more our own There are too too many that yet do not so cleave to this Lord and his Word but that they suffer other things other Lords to carry them away Many could be content to have Christ their Savior but they will not have him their Lord and King to rule in them and over them Let us break their bands asunder say they and cast away their cords from us And again Who is Lord over us Let such to their terror consider that fearful sentence passed against them But those mine Enemies that would not that I should reign over them bring hither and slay them before me They are counted Gods Enemies and adjudged to be slain before his face Yea he will break them with a red of iron and dash them in pieces like a potters vessel Others will let him be their Lord as far as they please and in what they list as if they would appoint their work themselves as some coy servants which the Lord will not indure Well let us bring our hearts to yield unto him as our Lord else we shall never have Salvation by him There 's no refreshing by him unless we take up his yoke both must go together they that will not willingly stoop to him he will be their Lord and King in despight of them and that to their confusion Now for the afflicted conscience that travels for mercy and pardon and desires after Christ more then all the world dost thou as earnestly desire him to be thy Lord and King and art thou willing to take up his yoke and that he shall rule and reign in thee and none else and that in all things be of good comfort thou art one of those whom Christ will save Which according to his abundant mercy c. Now we are to observe 1. The benefit bestowed for which he blessed God namely For begetting us again unto a lively hope 2. The moving cause His mercy nay abundant mercy 3. The means whereby The Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead of which as they lie in order Hath begotten us again unto a lively hope This is the benefit God hath begot them again to the hope of Salvation for so he means for by hope is not
good work 117 Verse 18 19. 1. THe third reason of the foregoing Exhortation 118 2. A man may know himselfe redeemed 119 3. Redemption presupposeth bondage and slavery ibid. 4. There 's a way whereby to come out of our bondage 120 5. The whole life of an unregenerate man is vain 121 6. Children readily follow the evil example of their Parents ibid. 7. Whom we are here to understand by fathers ibid. 8. Popish Religion stands in patches 122 9. Parents must give their children good example ibid. 10. To follow the example of our Ancestors is no sure rule 123 11. The things of this world are insufficient to redeem any out of his spiritual bondage ibid. 12. The things of this world are corruptible vain and uncertain 125 13. Christs blood the true price of mans redemption 126 14. In what respects Christ is compared to a Lamb 129 15. We are not to listen to either believe all we hear 131 Verse 20 21. 1. THe prevention of an Objection 132 2. Christ was ordained before the world 133 3. The world shall not always continue 135 4. Christ how manifested ibid. 5. God is constant and unchangeable ibid. 6. Gods promises are unchangeable 136 7. Christ was then exhibited when God decreed he should so be ibid. 8. What God hath decreed shall be in dwe time accomplished 136 9. Three differences of times and why this called the last 137 10. God will no otherwise reveal his will then he hath already done ibid. 11. We now live in the latter end of the last times ibid. 12. Why Christ came towards the latter end of the world 138 13. What we are to do that others may think well of us ibid. 14. We cannot believe in God but by the Son ibid. 15. In Christs Resurrection the whole Trinity had a hand 139 16. The benefits which they reap that believe in Christ ibid. Verse 22. 1. VVHere there 's no love nor fear of God there can be no true brotherly love 140 2. Where there 's the true fear or love of God there 's also brotherly love ibid. 3. There 's uncleanness in us both in soul and body 142 4. Where there is sanctification of the soul there is also sanctification of the body 143 5. The Word of God is the outward instrument of our cleansing ibid. 6. Why the Word is called Truth ibid. 7. The Spirit is the inward worker of Sanctification 144 8. Till we be cleansed by the Spirit we are unfit for any duty ibid. 9. The end of our Sanctification is to be fruitful in good works ibid. 10. What love is ibid. 11. The properties of love 146 12. Two caveats to be observed of them that for redressing of wrongs make use of the Magigrate 147 13. There 's little love in the world 148 14. The causes of the want of love 150 15. The effects of the want of love 151 16. Reasons inciting to the duty of love 152 19. The fruits of love must accompany the profession thereof 153 20. Brotherly offices must proceed from brotherly affections ibid. 21. Love must reach to all ibid. 22. How we ought to love the wicked 155 23. Love must be without faining ibid. 24. Love must be mutual 156 25. The properties of pure love 157 26. A Christians love must be earnest 158 27. Love must be constant ibid. Verse 23. 1. NO unregenerate person can truly love 159 2. Such as are born again must needs love ibid. 3. What Regeneration is ibid. 4. The Lord the Author thereof 160 5. The Lords will the cause thereof 161 6. Without Regeneration all things else we have are nothing ibid. 7. Regeneration of absolute necessity 162 8. The effects of Regeneration 163 9. A regenerate man is not the same he was before ibid. 10. A regenerate man groweth by degrees 164 11. Why men grow no faster in goodness ibid. 12. A caveat for such as complain they do not grow 165 13. There 's no perfection here in this life ibid. 14. Regeneration cometh not by nature 167 15. Gods Spirit by the Word changeth mans heart ibid. 16. Gods Word is the instrumental cause of our conversion 168 17. God doth not always tye himself thereunto ibid. 18. The Ministers of the Word are appointed of God the instruments to convert souls 169 19. Whence it cometh to pass that the Word worketh Regeneration 170 Verse 24 25. 1. VVHerein mans life may be compared to grass 171 2. How to be prepared for death 172 3. The glory of a carnal man but a vain thing 174 4. Nothing in an unregenerate man can abide the Lords examination 175 5. Gods Word the means whereby to live for ever ibid. 6. The Word by preaching made the instrument of Regeneration 176 7. The Word ought to be preached in every Congregation 177 8. The Word must be so preached as that it may be avouched to be indeed the Word of God ibid. CHAP. II. THe Coherence of this Chapter with the former with the sum thereof and of the first three Verses 179 Verse 1 2 3. 1. REgeneration and the love of sin cannot stand together 180 2. There 's no perfection to be attained unto here ibid. 3. To be is a Christian a work of great difficulty 181 4. Under those here named all other corruptions are included ibid. 5. Most of the corruptions here named are inward 182 6. That 's nought which is forbidden in Gods Word ibid. 7. What malice is with the difference between it and anger 183 8. What we are to understand by guile ibid. 9. Guile is to be avoided as well in smal as great matters 184 10. What Hypocrisie is 185 11. What Envy ibid. 12. What evil speaking ibid. 13. The Word of God cannot thrive in an unsanctified heart 186 14. Our desire toward the Word must be earnest ibid. 15. Our desire toward the Word must be constant 187 16. Our desire toward the Word must be impartial 188 17. Ministers must have store of milk for their spiritual children and store of love and much patience ibid. 18. The Word why compared to milk 189 19. Nothing sweeter to Gods children then the Word 189 20. The Word is the common food of all Christians ibid. 21. The Word why called sincere ibid. 22. Why Christians are to desire after the Word 191 23. Christians must daily grow in grace ibid. 24. Such as finde the Word powerful for their Salvation do the more desire it and affect it 192 25. Christ is sweet to a Christian and sweetens all that he hath 193 26. Christ is every way bountiful to his ibid. Verse 4 5. 1. VVHerein Christs bounty doth appear 194 2. A comparison between the Temple of Jerusalem and that which Christ maketh of all that believe in him ibid. 3. Christ why compared to a stone ibid. 4. To believe in Christ which is to come to him is a great priviledge ibid. 5. Christians must come to Christ 195 6. Christ the foundation that bears up his Church 198
the Word of God which liveth and abideth for ever THis duty of love is of such use and we so untoward to it and so hard a thing for us to love as we ought that it s urged with a Reason True it is so and no more then needs for the spirit that is in us lusteth after envy The Reason is taken from the grace of Regeneration bestowed upon them They were born again and therefore were to shew the fruits thereof as in other things so in this of love Where might be noted 1. That such as are not born again cannot love no more then men can gather Grapes of Thorns or Figs of Thistles or pour Wine out of a Bottle full of Vinegar but as Grapes are gathered of the Vine so must love come from a Regenerate man not otherwise 2. That the Regenerate man must needs love therefore they that declare no love but hate their Brethren the people of God especially shew they be not born again nor of God But I proceed to the words Being born again Here 's occasion offered to speak of the grace of Regeneration Touching it consider briefly these particulars 1. What it is to be born again It s to be made new creatures to be cast in a new mold to have the corrupt Image of Sin which we have by Nature and wherein we were conceived and born put off throughout and the contrary good one wherein we were at the first created put on to have the understanding enlightned with distinct knowledge of God the heart bowed to the obedience of God c. new thoughts desires speeches actions In the new Creature all things must become new Thus it s done to all that were elect before the foundation of the world They are changed up and down from a good state by Creation to a bad in Adam from thence to a good one in Christ by grace here in expectation of glory hereafter For the wicked they are changed from good to bad and there remain the same but still worse and worse for ever we should give God thanks that made us so good at first be humbled to see our base and woful state now and seeing there is help never to be quiet till we recover our first condition 2. That the Lord is the Author hereof he takes away the stony heart and gives a new heart an heart of flesh It s his work onely nor Man or Angel can change the heart to work a deadly hatred of that which by nature we love as our lives and to love and take delight in those courses duties companies which sometimes were as a Prison Alas the best Paul and Apollos cannot often even of their Children or very Friends not a few remain unconverted though haply in the mean time God bless their labors to convert many others Yea if an Angel should take a man and carry him to Heaven and shew him the Joys thereof and thence to Hell and shew him the Torments thereof yet this would not convert him neither all Mercies Afflictions or Plagues of Egypt It s a great work of God and so great as if all things were not possible to him he could not do it It s a greater work then the Creation of the World In that there was no opposition in this much we have not onely no aptness to good or to be wrought to goodness but a violent opposition against it there but to make the things here both to put out the corrupt nature and to put in the contrary good then he made all of nothing now he makes good of nought As its easier making a thousand glasses then the setting together one that is broke so it was easier to speak quo ad nos for all things are alike easie to God to make the world then to repair the broken Image of God in man It s a miraculous work of God greater then any miracles that Christ or his Apostles wrought our Saviors several miracles upon the bodies of men are all done in the conversation of a sinner sight restored to them that were blinde and darkness it self hearing to the deaf speech to the dumb feet to the lame Devils cast out yea many for the Devil possesseth us and all our Parts and Members Hearts Hands Eyes Tongues Feet c. as any Captain holds a Castle and hath it at command Thus it s a wonderful work of God to see a mans Soul and Life his wit will desires affections and all altered from black to white It was a wonder to see the Criple go and for him that was born blinde to see but it s more marvel to see a man converted for whereas God gave power to work all these miracles the raising of the dead not excepted to men this of regenerating is his own onely If we finde it ascribed to Ministers as Paul is said to have begot Onesimus and as a Father the Corinthians we must not conceive as if it were not proper to God onely but know that it is for that God would keep them the instruments by whom he works from contempt A good Husband or Wife may be a good means each to other but have no power of themselves Adam could easily cast away himself but none could restore him but God onely as a Childe of half a year old may break a glass which all the men in the Town cannot set together again It s wrought of God by uniting us to Christ by Faith through his holy Spirit which works this alteration when pardoning our sins past he taketh away the guiltiness and punishment thereof in his death Let all that can prove it give all glory to God for so unspeakable a mercy even that when they were going headlong to destruction when as vile as any he yet called them passing by thousands which yet lie in their sins And for them that can prove no such thing let them not delay nor put off to the last as the fashion is as though it could be dispatcht in a trice or with a wet finger but seek it both earnestly and quickly in the means appointed Why do men think they shall repent on their death bed rather then now Is it because the pain or fear of death will make them Alas all the Plagues in the world cannot change a man without God and will God be near to work then Nay he that was rejected in health and life will more likely cast off in death and if he will not bless his Word will he work in the end by other means This is little better then Sauls practise to go to the Devil when God would not help him 3. That the Lords own will is the moving cause hereof As he Elected freely and gave Christ of his love so this Nothing in us could move him hereto but whom he elected before the world those doth he of the
effectually called heretofore I have laid down the marks hereof if thou findest thou art then be of good comfort Be thankful for that God hath called thee leaving others there being no more worth or aptness in thee then in them and study how to walk worthy of this high and holy calling even in all zealous and godly conversation not fashioning our selves like unto the world from which we be called but differing as much in our behavior as we hope to do in our end not defiling our selves with any evil not yielding to our lusts not doing any thing unbeseeming our holy calling but as he is a holy God that hath called us and its an holy Gospel whereby we are called so we may be holy in all maner of conversation This is the end as of our Election and Redemption so of our calling So that we must not serve God coldly who hath singled us out from the world but look we be singular persons a peculiar people to him On the other side if our hearts tell us that we be not effectually called then is our case bad Gods callings which we have not obeyed will be accusations against us O how few be truly called most hold on in a prophane and bad course others having reformed some things and thereupon counted themselves in a good estate nay given some good hopes yet have after fallen shamefully some to the world some to open prophaneness for there is no stay of a man till he be effectually called O then entreat God now to work on your hearts you know not whether you shall ever be called more or not To day if ye will hear his voyce harden not your hearts listen to Gods voyce call upon him to open thine eyes and change thine heart When thou comest to the Word pray O Lord strike that stroke that may truly convert my Soul yea let all Gods mercies and thy several afflictions and crosses be as so many voyces calling thee to God count them so and listen and yield to them and though heretofore thou hast turned the deaf ear to God yet now let it be so no more Into his eternal glory The end why and whereunto they be called even that they might have glory not vanishing but eternal glory so that it was not possible but that they should be saved See 1 Thess. 2. 12. 2 Thess. 2. 13 14. 1 Pet. 1. 3. 1. He that is effectually called is an happy man and of high dignity 2. Let such walk worthy hereof glorifying God with all their might 3. It should whe● on others to listen to the voyce of the Lords call What shall they lose they shall come from sin and shame from wrath and damnation and shall be admitted into Gods favor partake of grace here and of glory hereafter No marvel people be so loath to yield and we have so many delays and hard answers of them Are they not shrewdly hurt to be called to this estate Now in that the Apostle useth this as an Argument that the Lord would confirm strengthen and stablish them even for that he had called them we may note that Whom God hath effectually called he will never forsake but continue them to the end His nature is unchangeable whom he loveth once he loveth always to the end we are indeed apt to fall away daily but Christ hath prayed for us and our salvation is not now in our own keeping By Christ Jesus Christ is the way by which all good comes to us as our Election so also our effectual calling 1. It s therefore not from any merit of ours but for Christs sake that we are called we must not be proud of our selves but thankful unto God through Christ. 2. This also may comfort us we shall never fall our calling hath such a sure foundation After that ye have suffered a while He prays that God would make them perfect c. but in the due time even when they had passed the few afflictions and tryals he had appointed Here note 1. That we must go through troubles ere we come to our perfection in Heaven There 's a time for all things a time for Soldiers to fight and a time for them to rest and enjoy the spoil after victory The cross is the Christians companion Many are the troubles of the Righteous and we must look for such in this world It hath been the Kings-road and High way to Heaven that sanctified way wherein from Abel until this time all Gods Worthies the Patriarchs Prophets Apostles Christ himself c. have walked Neither is this without cause for afflictions serve to humble us for sins past and fetch us from wandring as the Shepherds dogs doth the sheep whereof David had experience Psal. 22. and 119. They serve also to mortifie our lusts tame our pride subdue and kil our rebellious old man helping us against it which would else be too strong for us so to hold us in compass when we be well as an hedge of thorns Children must be washed and made clean though they cry so must we from our sins and as they by mustard or the like must be weaned from the dug so must we by afflictions from the world which we love too well and as as there were no rule with children without the rod so would we be unruly were it not for afflictions They also make us heavenly minded and hereby our Faith Patience and such other graces are tryed as whether we have such or not whether more or less then we thought yea they serve to purifie and encrease that measure we have for as standing waters gather mud and bodies without exercise wax unhealthful so but for afflictions we should be in a bad case Hereby grace is made more active and fruitful as the vine is by pruning 1. Therefore we must be content to go this way to heaven and glad to We must not think to have a new way strewed and paved and covered as it were with carpets when as the other Worthies of the Lord have waded to the ankles in blood 2. How can they that give themselves to all jollity and put away all hearts grief and do wholly give themselves to profits pleasures feasting c. How can these I say think they are going to Heaven-ward They will have their will here whatsoever befal them hereafter 3. If any should hereupon doubt that they are not in the way to Heaven because they have no troubles c. What have you no troubles Are you not troubled with a rebellious and sinful heart and fight you not with Principalities and Powers and Temptations that make you cry our sometimes O wretched man that I am c and do you never meet with ill tongues for the profession of the truth you do Then are not you without troubles though it may be you have not had
confutation of an Error 36 Verse 6. 1. VVE must rejoyce in the assurance of our Salvation 37 2. Religion reforms mirth ibid. And moderates lawful mirth ibid. 3. Being assured of Heaven we must rejoyce even in our troubles 38 4. Gods children must here undergo many troubles 39 5. Afflictions are tryals 41 6. Here on earth heaviness and rejoycing may stand together 42 7. The godlies afflictions are short ibid. 8. Afflictions come by the wise disposing of Almighty God 43 Verse 7. 1. A Qualification of their troubles 43 2. Affliction tryeth whether we have Faith 44 3. How we may try our Faith ibid. 4. Affliction tryeth whether our Faith be more or less then we take it 45 5. Affliction serveth to purifie and encrease Faith ibid. 6. Faith more precious then gold 46 7. Faith will be crowned at the last day 47 8 Christ will come on the last day to judge the world 48 9. The godly shall be publiquely rewarded 49 Verse 8. 1. VVHereat Ministers should aim in commending their people 49 2. Through Faith we believe even things above the reach of our reason 50 3. True love the fruit of Faith 51 4. How to try both our Faith and Love 52 5. Faith must directly fasten it self on Christ Jesus 52 6. A proof of the Divinity of Christ 53 7. Joy a fruit of Faith ibid. 8. Why no true joy can proceed from our selves 54 9. The joy of believers is unspeakable and glorious ibid. Verse 9. 1. EVery man is in danger of utter destruction 55 2. The godly by Faith do even here enjoy Salvation ibid. 3. No pains too much to get Faith 56 4. Salvation not the end or reward of our works ibid. 5. We cannot merit Heaven 57 6. Believers shall have also the salvation of their bodies ibid. 7. What those are to look for that follow Christ 58 Verse 10. 1. NO point touching Salvation is to be taught or received but what 's grounded on the Word 59 2. The Prophets took great pains to know the mystery of our Salvation by Christ ibid. 3. The Prophets and old Fathers were saved by Christ as well as we 60 4. The Doctrine of the Gospel not new 61 5. The Prophets foretold of Christ 62 6. The Harmony between the Old and New Testament 62 7. Salvation why called Grace 63 8. The Prophets did partake of Salvation though they saw not Christ in the flesh ibid. Verse 11. 1. VVE must endeavor to know what 's profitable to be known ibid. 2. The Prophets searched into this great mystery through the direction of the Spirit ibid. 3. Gods Spirit the Author of the Old Testament 64 4. A proof of the Divinity of the Holy Ghost ibid. 5. The sufferings of Christ foretold in the Old Testament ibid. 6. Why it was needful that Christ should suffer for us 65 7. Three degrees of our Saviors Victory ibid. 8. Through afflictions we must come into glory 66 Verse 12. 1. THe Anabaptists confuted ibid. 2. The Covenant of Grace one and the same throughout all ages 67 3. The Author Matter Form and End thereof ibid. 4. The difference about the measure given and persons to whom ibid. 5. Why God sent his Son no sooner ibid. 6. Why theirs was called the time of the Law and ours of the Gospel 68 7. God not to be charged with inconstancy 68 8. The same Gospel which was preached by the Prophets was also preached by the Apostles 69 9. The Apostles have left a perfect direction for all things needful for our Salvation 70 10. Why the Angels desire to see the perfection of the Salvation of Gods Church ibid. Verse 13. 1. DOctrine and Exhortation must be joyned together ibid. 2. The corrupt conceits of the Jews about Salvation 72 3. The corrupt conceits of Christians about it 73 4. The best prize it not as they should ibid. 5. What sobriety is and of sobriety about meat and drink ibid. 6. Sobriety about Apparel Recreation and Profits 74 7. What Faith is with the parts thereof 76 8. What it is to trust perfectly ibid. 9. Salvation a most special grace 78 10. What we are to expect by Christ 79 11. Salvation is not of our own procuring or seeking ibid. 12. The Gospel lays open Christ Jesus unto us 80 Verse 14. 1. THe two parts of Sanctification 81 2. Obedience and Sanctification follow faith ibid. 3. God calls for obedience 82 4. We must obey in all things that are commanded be the Commandment never so strange or unpleasing 83 5. The strict obedience of the Jesuits to their Superiors ibid. 6. We must obey without consulting with flesh and blood whosoever or whatsoever be against it voluntarily and constantly 84 7. What may stir us up unto obedience 86 8. Two parts of obedience ibid. 9. We must forsake evil before we can do good 87 10. Ignorance is the cause and root of a bad life ibid. 11. Why being so well instructed they were termed ignorant 88 12. All knowledge without the knowledge of Christ is nothing ibid. 13. Knowledge without Reformation is but ignorance ibid. 14. Such as have attained knowledge must not live as they did before 89 Verse 15 16. 1. HOliness must be added to abstinence from sin 90 2. This duty needful to be urged ibid. 3. Christians must be holy 91 Holy in all maner of conversation 92 4. God is holy 93 5. A twofold calling 94 6. The parts of the inward calling ibid. 7. The fruits thereof with the marks negative and affirmative 95 8. Why the Apostle doth so earnestly exhort unto Holiness 96 9. Ministers must prove their Doctrine by Gods Word 97 10. Obedience is to be yielded to those Doctrines which are proved by the Word 98 11. Gods word the rule of all truth 99 12. The use of the Apocrypha Books with the respect which is to be given thereto 100 13. Christians must be ready in the Scriptures ibid. 14. The more the Lord bestows on any the more he expects from them 102 15. The Popish Doctrine of Free-will hath no ground from this place 103 16. Nor is it against the married estate ibid. Verse 17. 1. VVHy we ought here to pass our time in fear 104 2. Three kindes of fear Natural Slavish Filial of which the last is often enjoyned 105 3. Whence it proceedeth with the benefits and marks thereof and opposites thereunto 106 4. Means to attain unto the fear of God 107 5. God requires our whole time for his service 108 6. Christians here in this world are but sojourners 111 7. The first reason of the fore-going Exhortation 113 8. Such as call God Father must walk in fear and obedience as Sons 114 9. What the name Father implyeth ibid. 10. The second reason of the foregoing Exhortation 115 11. How God doth and will judge of mens actions in this life at death and on the day of Judgement 116 12. The person of man how taken ibid. 13. Four things required to the being of a
7. Christ is a living foundation 200 8. The prevention of an Objection 201 9. Christ disallowed of whom and why ibid. 10. Such things are often disallowed of men which are allowed of God 202 11. There 's an union between Christ and believers ibid. 12. How to come to be stones of this building 204 13. The whole Church makes but one Spiritual House 205 14. Every particular believer is a Spiritual House ibid. 15. Such as are united to Christ ore made holy 206 16. Believers are Priests to God ibid. 17. The prevention of an Objection 207 18. Christians are not now without Sacrifices and what they are ibid. 19. Why called Spiritual Sacrifices 208 20. Our service of God must be dòne in a Spiritual maner 209 21. The prevention of an Objection ibid. 22. Spiritual Sacrifices are not regarded of carnal men ibid. 23. Through Christ our Sacrifices are acceptable to God 210 24. Our works though imperfect accepted through Christ ibid. Verse 6. 1. THe Testimony of Gods Word is that which settles us in any point of Doctrine 211 2. The Old Testament of the same authority with the New ibid. 3. Of old people were more ready in the Scripture then they are now 212 4. What the Lord saith he doth ibid. 5. God lays the foundation of his Churches Salvation ibid. 6. The Papists take from Christ his Kingly Prophetical and Priestly Office 213 7. Believers do always finde enough in Christ ibid. 8. The miserable condition of them that believe not in Christ and who they are 214 9. Believers can never fall away wholly nor finally ibid. Verse 7 8. 1. GOds promises are to be particularly applyed 215 2. Christ is precious unto all those that believe 216 3. Such are unbelievers which are disobedient 217 4. Why the Jews did reject Christ 218 5. Succession is of Doctrine or Person 219 6. Such as do least good challenge the goodliest titles 220 7. Such as would be reputed builders are usually enemies to true builders ibid. 8. Ministers must be builders ibid. 9. Every man must be a builder 221 10. The impiety of these times ib. 11. The carelesness of these times 222 12. The enemies of the Church unable to hinder the building thereof 223 13. Ministers must divide the Word aright and give every man his portion 224 14. How Christ and his Word become stumbling blocks to unbelievers 225 15. Nothing so good whereat corrupt nature will not take occasion to stumble ibid. 16. The world hath ever stumbled at Christ ibid. 17. The Papists stumble at him also the ignorant civil prophane and such as will not part with some beloved sin 226 18. Such as stumble at the Word stumble at Christ 227 19. Offences taken against the Word removed 228 20. Scandals of the Papists against it 230 21. Why and wherein they charge our Doctrine 230 22. About auricular confession fasting days marriage ibid. 23. Offences at preaching the Word 231 24. Which the true Church 237 25. Offences against the Preachers of the Word 239 26. Offences against Professors of the Word 241 27. Offences arising from mens selves hindring their zealous profession of Religion 244 28. No end of the Devils devices 248 29. Why so few be saved ibid. 30. Why people have no minde to Religion ibid. 31. Gods word is therefore bestowed on as that we may be guided thereby 249 32. How we are to obey the same ibid. 33. Four sorts of disobedient persons the prophane 251 The meerly civil the ignorant and hypocrites 252 34. Why Christ proves a Rock of offence unto most 253 35. Whether it be lawful and meet to handle the Doctrine of Gods Decree 254 36. God hath ordained some to destruction 255 37. This was of his own will and for no cause out of himself 257 38. The Lord hath done this most justly 258 39. The Lord hath done this unchangeably 259 40. Marks of such as are reprobates 260 Verse 9. 1. MInisters must speak comfortably to the good contrarily to the bad 262 2. And warily deliver the Word that each may take his due portion 262 3. What election is ibid. 4. God before the world hath ordained some men to salvation ibid. 5. The cause hereof was because he would 263 6. The number of the elect small ibid. 7. They that be elect cannot but be saved 264 8. A man may know and be assured of his election 265 9. Notes of election 266 10. Whether we may be certain of anothers election 267 11. Christians through Christ are made Kings Priests Prophets 268 12. Christ and his Gospel preached in time of the Law ibid. 13. The promises and priviledges laid down in the Scriptures belong onely to Gods elect ibid. 14. Election is the foundation of all the good comes to us ibid. 15. Christ how our King Priest and Prophet 269 16. Believers are others then the world thinks for ibid. 17. The Jews why termed an holy Nation 270 18. All that be the Lords company are holy persons ibid. 19. Comfort and counsel for sanctified persons 271 20. The misery of those that are unsanctified with advice to them to come out of this condition ibid. 21. The Church Gods peculiar people ibid. 22. No marvel though he set much by it 272. 23. Gods glory the end of all the priviledges bestowed on us 273 24. We were elected of God that we might shew forth his praises and not to be idle c. 273 25. Gods glory the furthest end of our election ibid. 26. Effectual calling a certain argument of election ibid. 27. Two sorts of calling outward and inward ibid. 28. The Word the outward instrument hereof 274 29. The parts of effectual calling ibid. 30. Gods free mercy the cause hereof ibid. 31. Every one must endeavor to prove his calling ibid. 32. What to understand by darkness and light 275 33. Every unregenerate person is in darkness 276 34. Every true believer is brought to the saving knowledge of Christ ibid. Verse 10. 1. FOr a people or particular persons to look to their beginnings is of good use 278 2. No priviledges can exempt the contemners of the Word from Gods wrath 279 3. Gods mercy power and truth in making the Jews a people again 280 4. Impenitent persons not worthy the name of people ibid. 5. No outward affliction doth nullifie Gods Church 281 6. To be the people of God a choice blessing ibid. 7. Sin unrepented of lets Gods mercy 282 8. What God did for the Jews was of mercy and so all we have ibid. Verse 11. 1. HOliness in heart and conversation must go together 283 2. Ministers must love and affect their people ibid. 3. The Saints are to be the objects of our love 284 4. Wisdom requisit in the Preachers of the Word 285 5. What meant by fleshly lusts ibid. 6. There are remnants of sin in the very best ibid. 7. Two sorts of sinners 287 8. Evil thoughts cast in by Satan or from our selves 288 9. The causes of evil
Apostles and Teachers the Devils disciples which pen Books stuffed with Errors either under the Names of the Apostles that so they may the sooner beguile and get credit to their Lyes or else without Names lest being found out by their Names they should suffer and be brought to punishment for their Errors or their infamous Names being seen in the forefront of their Book should cause any judicious and honest Reader with indignation to cast it away The Apostle I say contrariwise having the sound and holy Oracles of God from Heaven to deliver unto them puts to his Name There are many worthy Works I confess which have no Names put to them those especially which were written in the times of Persecution whereof the Authors howsoever desirous to spread the Truth of God hated and persecuted hereby notwithstanding shunned the hands of cruel tyrants This is not for any fault in the matter but only avoiding danger in speaking of the truth This is no disgrace to them but to their times and their enemies for men need not cast themselves into peril till God call them This condemns the vile practice of the wicked which hide themselves in the dark and in corners lewdness not abiding the light We must do nothing but that we dare put our hands to it and our Names We must do as the Angel did that rolled away the stone and sate upon it when he had done as if he should have said Let me see who will control that which I have done We must do so as we may bid our Adversary write a Book against us for any gross or unlawful thing we have done and stand in Alas what a folly is this you flee mens eyes but can you flee the eyes of the Almighty And if you cannot abide mens censure how shall you be able to stand before the Judgement seat of Almighty God who is a consuming fire An Apostle of Jesus Christ The word is general and signifieth one sent but here as elswhere often it is taken specially for one and the principal sort of Ministers differing from all others in these particulars 1. They were immediately called by Christ own mouth and sent abroad Many were called by him for Disciples and out of those he chose his Twelve Apostles 2. They had a larger measure of the Spirit then others so that they could not erre in their writings 3. They had also a larger Commission Go ye saith our Savior and Teach all Nations They were to preach to all the world but this Calling is ceased This notwithstanding it hath communion with all other sorts of Ministers that they were called and sent No man saith the Apostle takes this honor to him but he that is called of God as was Aaron and so were also the Prophets There are two things required in a Minister 1. That he be lawfully called and 2. That being in he discharge his duty faithfully Touching a Ministers Calling it must be both inward and outward 1. He must have an inward Calling from God which appears 1. By an aptness and competency of Gifts to teach and edifie the Church of God 2. By a willing minde to employ the same seeking not his own advantage and ease but the glory of God This makes the Minister As when God calls a King he gives him the heart of a King So if he appoint a man to be a father of Souls he fits him for it 2. He must have an outward Calling from the Church and those that are in place to alow and disalow Ministers whose approbation they must have which is not to make them but to approve of them for their further comfort that they may more boldly go forward The Brownists call us Bishops-Ministers because they call us to this Office but they do but alow and approve whom God hath made Both must necessarily concur the one go along with the other He that wants the inward though he have the outward is not a true Minister of God yet his actions are not to be esteemed nullities and void and he that in ordinary times having the inward wants the outward goes not to work humbly as he ought Well did Peter declare himself an Apostle one sent from God a Messenger who was to deal faithfully in his Message For he publisheth not here his own Inventions Poets Fables Heathen Stories Philosophers Conceits or mens Devices and Opinions but the holy Oracles of God from Heaven So must every Minister of God speak as the words of God What is the Chaff to the Wheat either ones Opinion to establish anothers Conscience But why doth he call himself by this great Name of his Office and put this high stile before his Epistle Not for vain ostentation or for his own sake but for the peoples good even to procure with them the more authority to that which he was to write for who should dare to refuse that which comes from the Lord Jesus the eternal Son of God the Light of the world the Savior and Judge thereof Nay who should not with all high reverence submit himself thereunto So did the Prophets begin The word of the Lord Thus saith the Lord whereby they set their peoples faith on work to look to God and not to men Hence let the Ministers of God learn to procure what credit and authority to their Ministery they can signifying often that it is Gods will thereby drawing their peoples mindes upward from the instrument They must deliver such soundness of Doctrine as may be food it self not froth which accordingly they must deliver in a grave and religious maner adding thereunto as Prayer so also a godly life and all little enough considering the prophaneness of our hearts that so little regard what we hear yea hear without preparation or reverence being of us no sooner gone then forgotten But how dares he call himself an Apostle that had deserved by his most shameful threefold denial of his Master to be utterly discarded of his Office and utterly cast away for ever By the grace of God he doth this by Faith apprehending the mercy of God towards him and he doth it to publish his grace and favor who had upon his true Humiliation and Repentance not only forgiven his sin and received him to mercy but restored him to his Office again Go your way said the Angel unto the Women tell his Disciples and Peter that he goeth before you into Galilee And afterward our Savior by a threefold Commission restored him to his Office from which by his threefold Denial he had shut himself Hence note That Repentance will wipe away our sins and make them as if they had never been Joel 2. 12 13 14. Mic. 7. 18 19. 1 Joh. 1. 9. which 1. Shews Gods unspeakable mercy towards penitent Sinners 2. Is a matter of endless comfort to us which through our corruption fail and sin daily
exceed for the matter of it nor for the fashion God hath given it for necessity comeliness and decency it must not be newfangled either we use it to wantonness or pride 3. For Recreation it must be sparing in time place measure to make us more fit for our duty for God hath not set us here to satisfie and pamper the flesh but to mortifie the lusts thereof not to play but to do his work to this end is Recreation to be used 1. This rebuketh those that wallow in beastly and unlawful lusts in whoredom chambering wantonness drunkenness c. so in games altogether unlawful yet many make a practice of these to whom Solomons speech would well suit I said of laughter thou art madness For a man to sport at Gods dishonor and their own destruction is madness Can we play with nothing but edge tools the Lord will laugh such to scorn O turn your beastly pleasures into weeping and wailing 2. This rebuketh also such as are drunk with lawful things as some that so glut themselves and so pamper the body that they make themselves unfit for any duty many waste and consume themselves this way Bodies and Goods yea Souls and all Others also are so curious in their meats as that nothing can please them nothing's good enough for them yea are more angry for any want this way then for any sin in themselves or others they have fat Bodies but lean Souls O think they this is a goodly life but indeed it is a swinish life fitter for beasts then men most unseemly for a Christian So for Apparel they that follow every new fangled Fashion and are so proud and costly and so over curious as they spend no small time in trimming themselves taking no care to trim their Souls with Christs Righteousness and Spiritual Graces How are they to be reprehended What painted Sepulchres are these may not an image have gay clothes put on yet how many spend their precious time and goodly patrimonies about this vanity So for Recreations some are so mad on them as they think and speak of nothing else as if they were set here to eat and drink and rise up to play thus spend they the greatest part of their time 3. Let us therefore pare away whatsoever super fluity hath been in us in these things and learn soberly to use these mercies as the Gospel teacheth us so as thereby we may ever be made fitter for our duties and to serve God and that they may be as a staff in our hand to help us on in our journey and this is to walk pilgrim like be we more careful in feeding clothing and making merry the Soul For the latter namely profits we must also be sober both in getting and keeping them We must not onely use no unlawful means to get the world but use the lawful means moderately not setting our affections upon the world or being too earnest to compass it filling our selves with too many businesses and following the same too eagerly lest we neglect good duties or be hindred from doing them as we should 1. This condemns those that use flat unlawful means to get the world swearing lying deceiving oppression usury false weights and the like These pull a w● upon themselves besides that they heap up but chaff which the wind of Gods wrath will scatter God is an avenger of all such things O what reckonings do these multiply against themselves What answer shall they make that sell their souls to hell for pelf 2. This condemns not those onely that get thus but those that follow the world so eagerly as they minde nothing else of which sort most are all day long nothing but of the world no Prayer no hearing of the Word they think and talk of nothing else but the world Lords days and all they think Prayer would be an hindrance they savor nothing but of the earth they make more account of their old Shoes then they do of a Sermon they prize not such things when they are called to the Wedding Feast they have Farms and Oxen to hinder them or if they come all runs over for they be full already or as the Pharisees mock at that they hear or if they hear with joy the thorns worldly cares quickly choke it O this world undoeth most men its an enemy but not of it self but by reason of our sottishness and drunkenness that cannot moderate our selves but take too much of it and wound our selves many ways What will it profit them in the end to have embraced this strumpet she will serve us as Delilah did Sampson deprive us of our strength and give us into our enemies hands and as Jael the Wife of Heber did by Sisera thus will she serve her favorites 3. Learn we to be wise indeed laying up a treasure in heaven and laboring for meat that endureth to everlasting life For what will it profit a man to win the whole world if he shall lose his own soul O that Gods good servants should be so incumbred with the world O that that these base things should beguile and ensnare those that are born from above to the hope of so great glory Many good Christians are half drunk they are unfit for good duties cannot minde heaven from Monday morning till Saturday night and it is well if they be sober on the Lords day many be not but let both their hearts and tongues be employed on the world who yet count themselves Christians O what excellent Christians would some be were it not for the world but how doth it mar many keep them from good duties weigh down their mindes its that wherewith they are too easily beset O let 's winde up our plummets as the clock-keeper once every day keep our mindes from being weighed down with the world we must set apart some time to draw up our minde especially Saturday night not letting them down all the day following We must so use the world as not to run into evil for it neither to neglect any duty to God our Souls our Families our Neighbors the Poor or any other we must use it to further us as the Pilgrim doth his staff Learn we to prize Spiritual graces which are the onely current coyn in the Countrey we are going to yet is not the seeking of Gods Kingdom the way to hinder us of that which is meet but rather the onely furtherer would we have more then will do us good But if we shall have less of the world are we not more then enough recompenced if we shall have more peace of Conscience more credit here more favor with God more joy in death Hope to the end for the grace c. This is the main Exhortation to constancy in the Faith to the which the other two former Exhortations served as furtherances others read the words
come to true repentance therefore put it not off it s not the work of a day or sickness the fittest time to be allotted thereto but constantly to be set upon till we shall attain thereunto As obedient children Or children of obedience that is given to obedience and studying thereto with all their might of body and soul as if you could imagine obedience to be a creature and a mother that had children resembling her self so must we be the contrary hereof is elsewhere expressed Children of disobedience that is given over unto all disobedience and in other places the like phrases and to the same purpose are used see 1 Kings 21. 5. Psal. 50. 18 19. Mat. 7. 23. Hereunto the Apostle exhorteth for that they were called to be children which strongly enforceth this duty of obedience Obedience is that which God still calls for which he doth again and again require at our hands its better then sacrifice as contrarily rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft The Israelites doubtless spake well But O that there were such an heart in them saith God that they would fear me and keep my commandments always Neither hearing the Word nor knowing or speaking of it pleaseth God without obeying nothing else can comfort our Souls and Consciences in death nothing else can approve us to be the servants of the Lord or that we love him or that we shall continue to the end His sheep hear his voyce and follow him For the maner of our obedience 1. We must obey not to halves or where we lift but in all things not as Saul or Herod Nadab and Abihu there were the same persons incense censers altar that should be onely the fire was not the same who therefore were punished by fire from heaven 2. We must not on the other side run without our errand nor do things whereof we have no commandment this is no obedience be it never so costly or painful have it never so goodly a shew And here falls to the ground all Will-worship of the Papist to whom it will be said Who required these things at your hands as also all good intents without warrant of the actions How was God displeased with them that offered their sons and daughters to the fire having no such commandment from him Moreover we must obey the Commandment of the Lord be it never so strange harsh unpleasing or contrary to Nature denying our selves contrary to custom though all the world counsel to the contrary and that not indenting or covenanting with the Lord beforehand for wages or success as to say I would do such a thing so I thought no hurt would come of it or that I should thrive in that course or that I should not meet with trouble no we must follow the Lord as the blinde man follows the staff of his leader and chooseth not his own way Thus did Abraham in forsaking his own Countrey at Gods Commandment in his old age it was his Native Countrey that wherein he had lived so long he was to go he knew not whether He had questionless contrary counsels of his Neighbors What a mad man are you to remove now and seek a new dwelling in your old age you are here known here are your Kindred you know the Countrey and have thriven It s as if one should remove a tree that hath grown long in place into another place when its old Well for all those he persisted in his obedience to Gods Commandment The Jesuits train up their Schollars in strange obedience as that they must do whatsoever their Superiors bid them and that speedily without questioning as to water a rotten tree to pour a vessel of good wine into a gutter to set trees with the roots upward c. when his Superior calls him to go in an instant and not to stay to make up the circle of an O when he is writing and made the one part of it he must not stay to make up the other part They to justifie this and provoke to obedience tell a miracle That one thus called of his Superior and leaving his O in the midst half made at his return found it made up a perfect O and so gilded that it shined c. Such obedience owe we to God and these rules be very good so as the Commanders and Commandments were good We must obey God directly and never cast about beforehand what shall be the end we must leave it to him and to obey him must needs fall out well Abraham did not amiss but sped well in obeying God So Noah and the rest Abraham never shifted for himself but twice about his wife and he was like then to have spoiled himself if God had not helpt him out of the bryars So Jonah Our own Devices never succeed though never so likely But we have such reaches before-hand that mar our obedience Oh if I were ruled by the Preacher I should not thrive by plain dealing nor wax rich or if I should leave such a course or such a course I should be poor If I should do thus and thus I should come to trouble but let us do our duty and let the Lord alone for his part to look to us in obeying him we cannot do amiss The wicked will leave their sin a little while it may be through Sickness or Fear or Counsel as the Dog that is beat from the Carrion or called away yet hath a Dogs eye back again after it and will be at it again as soon as one's back is turned yea and if haply they give good words yet will not their doings be answerable 3. We must obey without reasoning the case or consulting with flesh and blood we must binde Reason hand and foot to follow God as it were blindefold as Abraham in offering Isaac and Joshua in compassing Jericho and not as Naaman the Syrian Our Reason proves a very great enemy to obedience 4. We must obey whosoever or whatsoever be against it If Profits Pleasure Farm Oxen c. calls us away and God invite us we must follow him else have we no part in him If Father Mother Friend nay the Wife of our bosom entice us from him we must not give ear to them nay if our right hand eye or foot offend us we must cut them off and obey God He that hates not father and mother wife and children yea his own life for my names sake saith our Savior is not worthy of me yea if any should command and threaten us contrary to our obedience unto God we must not yield to them but rather obey God then them 5. Speedily not hereafter but to day while it is called to day c. not repent hereafter when I have taken my pleasure a while longer hear Sermons when I am thus rich have Prayer in my Family when such
businesses and le ts be over nay thou mayest be dead or meet with more ere they be gone 6. Voluntarily not be haled onely by pain and misery as Pharaoh God loves a chearful servant 7. Constantly not for a while as Joash but as Caleb and Joshua followed the Lord to the end yea when most revolted See the contrary punished in the Prophet that came from Bethel We must not be weary in well doing Reasons hereof may be these 1. Gods Soveraignty over us we Clay he our Maker 2. His Will a rule of Righteousness 3. His great mercies every way even to the worst but to his children wonderful ones 1. This condemns them that are so far from obeying and that in all things and after this maner that they will obey in nothing but as if they were set to cross the Lord what he forbids they love what he enjoyns they cannot away withal They live like masterless men as if they ought nothing to any were beholding to none What art thou not a piece of Clay the Lord thy Maker even he that threw Angels out of Heaven Adam out of Paradice opened the Earth rained down fire and brimstone on Sodom c. If his Soveraignty move thee not consider I beseech thee his Goodness Who hath nourished thee up given thee a comely body a reasonable Soul and so long kept thee that thou art not now in Hell What 's all this for that thou shouldst flie in his face that gives thee bread He lets thee hear his Word calls thee to Repentance c. Is it that thou shouldst tread these things under thy feet Oh thou art of thy father the Devil whose works thou dost and except thou fall down at the Lords footstool and humble thy self before him he will confound thee O consider this all ye that now forget God 2. It condemns such also as obey God to halves and in what they list in the mean time lying still in some beloved lust So Pharaoh obeyed so Herod and Saul But as Moses would not part with one hoof so will not God have us cast off any one Commandment God will have no parting Stakes The Devil like the Harlot would be contented with the one half but God like the true Mother will have all or none If God were so revenged of half-obedience under the Law what then now This halving is an Argument of no true Faith for that purifieth the heart also of no Repentance for he that repents truly of one sin repents truly of all Whosoever therefore thou art that dost thus thou art in the gall of bitterness and bond of iniquity thou art in the state of damnation If thou livest in the practice and love of one known sin profitable or pleasing this one shall be enough to sink thee down to destruction as one leak in a Ship may endanger the whole and one gate in a City open let in the Enemy 3. This rebukes the servants of God that yet walk not in that obedience that were meet but leave undone this and that duty slighting over others and letting loose their affections and lusts O this is not the chearful and constant obedience that we ought to perform in all things If neither his Authority nor his outward Benefits will move us consider we his love towards us in Jesus Christ that of children of wrath he hath made us his children that by giving his Son he hath freed us from Damnation and means to save us Oh the Name of Children calls for much obedience as the Name of Brethren should still all Controversie And this is the Argument which the Apostle here useth to perswade to obedience Oh we be Gods Children Children ought to obey their Parents there 's nothing more uncomely then the contrary much more we the Father of our Spirits Christ the natural Son was obedient to the death How obedient then must we be being but adopted ones Again That he hath called us to the hope of such an Inheritance what obedience doth this challenge For this is the force of the coherence of Verse 13. with those that go before Wherefore gird up the loyns of your minde c. That is Seeing God hath done such and such things for us let us trust perfectly on that grace that is brought unto us and walk obediently Yea the more we profit in obedience the more comfort we may have that we be the Lords and have true Faith the more will our comfort be also in our death So many of us therefore as can prove our selves the Lords do we labor to walk worthy hereof in all due obedience and for others that know not they are the Lords let them try it by obedience Many Covetous Usurers Oppressors Swearers c. will say they believe no be tryed by this rule If your heart stand to obey all Gods commandments it is so but while you live in any thing you know is sin you are voyd of Faith Other poor humble Christians that hate sin deadly and unfeignedly desire to please God in all things yet say they cannot believe Why who hath wrought these things in you Not flesh and blood they are the gifts of Gods sanctifying Spirit therefore they come from Faith as if we see a Sun-beam we say the Sun is risen if an Apple that is good we say there is a good Tree Except therefore you will say that men can gather Figs of Thistles or Grapes of Thorns you cannot deny but that you have Faith wheresoever Sanctification is there Faith went before O but I finde it but weak yet as long as it is in truth with desire of increase it presupposes Faith as if we see a Sun-beam though but dimly yet we say the Sun is up after it will shine out more clearly So we say it s a good Tree though the fruit be small at first so long as it is good If any shall say I feel in me no such thing now therefore I have no Faith what shall become of me Was it ever so with thee Look to the time past and thou must not deny the mercy of God shewed thee Thou canst not deny but it hath been so then thou hast had Faith then hast thou Faith still though it seem raked up in the ashes when thou with the bellows of Prayer and the Word and God with his Spirit shall blow away these ashes it will uncover it self and burn out again Not fashioning your selves c. There are two parts of Obedience or Repentance a dying unto sin and a living unto righteousness a renouncing of lusts and imbracing holiness a ceasing to do evil and a learning to do well an abhorring of that which is evil and cleaving to that which is good a putting off of the old man and putting on of the new he that hath the one hath also the other they
are married by the Lord and none can divorce them Therefore if any man seem to have the one and not the other he hath neither in truth If therefore any leave evil and do not good or if any do some good and hate not all evil he is but an hypocrite For the order here used he sets renouncing of our lusts first before imbracing of holiness men put off their old rags ere they can put on new apparel purge the stomack of ill humors ere they take good nourishment dig up the weeds ere they sow or set herbs so in this case Where therefore there remaineth the love of any lust or sin there is no true grace in that heart neither will any grow till that be rooted out God will not plant any of his grace there till the Devils planting be pluckt up Many think they be Christians and do many things well though they keep the love of some sin no mark the love of grace and goodness and the love of any sin cannot be in one heart they are so contrary the one to the other therefore while thou livest in any known sin and lovest any lust as sure as God is in heaven thou art an hypocrite and let me perish if there be one dram of true grace in thee but thou standest in the state of damnation Therefore renounce and bid adieu to thy lusts and seeing you make a profession and do many things will you lose heaven for your lust for one sin so run that you may obtain lose not heaven for a little make either something or nothing of thy profession banish from thee all sin that God may work some true grace in thy heart In your ignorance He fathers their following of lusts on their ignorance and ignorance is the cause and root of a wicked and bad life For till men know the will of God out of his Word how can they do it and what are we prone to by nature but to all the evil in the world Therefore the devil labors by all means to hold people in blindness of all books hath most been an enemy to the Bible and to sincere and diligent reading and preaching the Scriptures for were those away he knows all iniquity must needs abound as there did in Popery when people were nuzled up in blindeness O what abundance of sin was committed but it did not so much appear because they were in the dark and the light of Gods word discovers sin which was then very rare As if one come into an house at midnight he ●ees no faults but when the morning comes then he sees a number of things out of order so in this clear light of the Gospel we see the wickedness that then appeared not in the dark Whether will not our nature run and whether may not the devil and world lead one when he hath no eyes to see whether he goes The blinde eats many a fly and a man may lead a blinde man into the deepest pit As the Raven first picks out the Lambs eyes and then kills it at his pleasure when it cannot see to escape away so doth the devil by people Ignorance is often compared to darkness and they that go in the dark often stumble fall and hurt themselves Sampson when blinde was led to any thing as to grinde to make Sports c. 1. This teacheth us to desire that the clear light of the Word may shine more and more brightly into all places of this land for there are many places that have either no preaching or else very seldom So as for want of knowledge people wallow in a number of lusts most fearfully the Lords day most grievously Profaned preachers slighted c. 2. Every Minister is to endeavor to the utmost of his power to bring their people to the knowledge of their duty that so they may be either truly converted or at least hereby restrained 3. People are to labor for knowledge else they must needs be captives of many lusts Think not as many do because ye are poor and not book-learned therefore you shall be held excused many think their very ignorance shall be a good plea because they know nothing God will hold them excused Is light come into the world and shall mens sin their ignorance hold them excused its otherwise 4. All parents are to have a special care where and in what Towns and houses they place their children they must place them where they may learn to know God to discern between good and evil and if it prevail not with them by and by yet there 's hope it shall lie as seed in their hearts that will shoot up in time But how can he say In their ignorance seeing they were well instructed and expert in the Law having it read among them daily and had they not good knowledge in the Law and in the Prophets True yet he justly calls them ignorant 1. Because though they were so cunning in the Law and Prophets yet they knew not Jesus Christ the end of the Law and so the sum of all 2. Their knowledge was onely in their brain and not effectual in their hearts to renew and reform them but they were carried away by their lusts notwithstanding of their knowledge 1. Then all the knowledge in the world without the knowledge of Christ Jesus is nothing If a man could measure the heavens tell the number of the stars had skill in all Arts and Sciences whatsoever yet without the knowledge of Christ it were vanity Paul knew much being brought up at the feet of Gamaliel But he counted all things else loss and dung for the excellent knowledge of Christ Jesus He desired to know nothing but Christ Jesus and him crucified If a man were the wisest in a County to arbitrate and compound controversies yet all this were nothing without the knowledge of Christ. 2. All the knowledge of the world if it reform not a man is but ignorance So much a man knows as he obeys That is not knowledge that is in the brain but that which soaketh down into the heart and transformeth a man into the similitude thereof so much men know as they mortifie their lusts He that lives after his lusts let him have never such store of knowledge he knows nothing yet as he ought to know what if a man know he should not Swear Lye commit Adultery c. yet doing these is he any whit the better Is he not rather much worse Yea the Devil himself hath more knowledge then any man The world wonders many times to see men of great knowledge do such and such things Alas Knowledge and Conscience are two several things and often sundred in the subject 1. Then let no man boast of his Knowledge Many love to hear themselves talk but look what power they have over their lusts what mastery over their affections 2. Do not we
if Preachers alleage Fathers Councels School-men c. O how they applaud them but if any shall alleage Scripture properly and plainly Oh he is a plain homespun Preacher he may do well in a Countrey Town but Christs sheep do otherwise they reverence and adore above all the Word of God This condemns the Papists that deal most treacherously and will not have the scriptures to be judge but Fathers Councels the Church And who is the Church but themselves and the Head of Councels but the Pope and so upon the point the Pope is the Church and so its like enough to go well on their sides And in their Councels who is any thing but the Pope and his Consistory as he will have every thing so it shal be as in their last Councel of Trent which they so magnifie as the most sacred Assembly that ever was which indeed was nothing else but a conspiracy of Traitors against the Crown and Dignity of Christ Jesus and his Truth there such were pickt as were fast to the Pope and the Religion of Rome and such as were sworn to be true thereto and when some few spake somewhat more boldly in some things then was well liked of they were quickly packt out and this charge they had after they had sate a while That they should interpret no Scripture but such as might stand with the Doctrine of Rome this was good stuff that whereas they should have brought their Doctrine to the rule of Scripture they must bring Scripture to their Doctrine as if the Carpenter should cut his rule according to the piece and not the piece according to his rule And howsoever they sate there at Trent disputing for a fashion yet nothing was concluded but such as the Pope and his Consistory at Rome devised which being set to them they were to publish and thus the parties become Judges and they that should stand at the Bar to be judged sit on the Bench to judge their own cause therefore it must needs go well on their side They cannot away that the Scripture should be the Judge because they then know how it would go with them and their Doctrine but we must receive it and try all Doctrine by it and stand to the sentence thereof as being the onely Judge So here the Apostle enjoyning holiness takes this as a sufficient proof It is written though that was against their nature and disposition though by following after it they might be counted Puritans Singular Proud Hypocrites c. yet they must not stand reasoning the case with flesh and blood they must be holy for so it was written If then we know any thing once proved by the Word of God we must make no more ado if the Word command a thing we must yield and obey if forbid a thing as vile we must dare no more meddle therewith then to eat poison For the Word of God is the Royal Law that Rule of Righteousness that must command all the world Prince and people must stoop hereunto This is the Law of his Kingdom whereby all we his Subjects must be ruled If the Lyon roar the Beasts tremble and if the Lord speak who is our Soveraign is it not meet that we should take knowledge hereof and yield obedience thereto this was ever Preface enough to the Prophets in their Sermons Thus saith the Lord The Word of the Lord c. and his Word not being left us in vain to shake it off at our pleasures the same may command obedience 1. This condemns the prophane and dissolute world do men go by any such rule and try ere they do any thing what God saith of it in his Word O that were too much preciseness But by what rules then If it stand with my pleasure with my profit with my ease with my credit most do so I shall be accounted a fool if I do not so O cursed rules What shall Profit Pleasure Mammon and our Lusts become now as it were our God dare we cast the word of God behinde us do we provoke the Lord to anger are we stronger then he Oh let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall It s written we must be holy therefore we must be so why then it s written we may not swear therefore we must not swear so oppress deceive commit uncleanness c. because the contrary is prescribed in the Word And yet how dare men live in those very sins against the Scriptures Hath not the world smarted sufficiently yet whereat to take warning What threw Adam out of Paradise drown'd the old World brought such variety of Judgements upon the Jews from time to time if not their disobedience have there drunkards enough swearers prophaners of the Lords-day Usurers c. been plagued and sent to Hell already This rebelling against the Word of God hath made all the racket and havock in the world and hath brought to confusion the Proudest and Mightiest If we had not the Word but were left to the light of nature God might condemn us for our sins how much more when by the Word he hath told us all his minde Well let us look to it if the Word may not be a light to guide us it will be a fire to consume us If it be not strong enough to make us yield obedience it will be strong enough to throw us headlong to confusion as whereby we shall be judged at the latter day If when God smites any one part of us with pain in extemity we be weary of our selves when yet we have many comforts and many to pity us and hope also of an end thereof what shall their care be that are smitten and plagued in all parts of Body and Soul there being no eye to pity them nor hope of an end which yet ensueth upon the disobedience to Gods Word Then will they fret and vex themselves O beast that I was that took not warning at such and such a time c. 2. For as many as are willing the Word should guide them and be it with or in appearance against them are willing to be ruled let these be of good comfort It s a good mark of Christs sheep they hear his voyce and follow him and he is of God that heareth and obeyeth his word Again in that it s said It is written we note That the Word of God is the rule of all Truth and Doctrine This condemneth the Papists which as if the written Word of God were insufficient and imperfect and the Prophets and Apostles either would not or could not or might not leave a perfect direction for us divide the word into written and unwritten Thereupon imposing a great number of Traditions Degrees and old received Opinions and Customs upon the people as matters whereon to ground their Faith and binde their Conscience as much as any of the written Word and that upon
it or look therein to read it What a contempt were this The Scripture yet is the Lords Letter sent to us to inform us of his will O what shall the condemnation of this Land be that having the light love darkness better and God having given us his Word which he gives not to all we make so light account thereof we will not bestow the searching of it Nay every toy proves sufficient to keep us from it O woful unthankfulness How did our Forefathers make account of the Word Job David they in Queen Maries time whereof some read it by stealth in Hay-gofes c. O how precious was it to them Cra threw away his Money but kept his New Testament when he suffered Ship-wrack Many poor Christians and dear servants of God in Spain and elsewhere do now read the Word of God and other good Books with peril of their lives O how shall they rise up against us which may with peace and much liberty and sundry encouragements read and be conversant in the Scriptures yet regard it not God sends his Letter to us we will not vouchsafe to open it What will we regard if we regard not the Scriptures I tell you God hath no greater blessing to bestow on Mortal man This little Book is the glory of the world without which all the world is but a dung-hill and if this were taken away it were better for us not to be then to be for we should do nothing but grope in darkness and be devoured of our lusts till Hell snatch us away le ts learn therefore at last to be wiser and that whilest we may Casting away our toys and vanities learn we to be better acquainted with the Word then at any time heretofore all that be strangers to it be strangers to true comfort Yea resolve we that no day shall pass us without reading some part of Scripture for our instruction else how shall we do our duties each to other how use prosperity and adversity how to learn either to live or dye Here as good housholders we may provide store both for our selves and others For the words themselves Be ye holy for I am holy They are taken as ye heard out of Leviticus Them the Lord used to his people whom he had chosen from all others on whom he bestowed many outward mercies and betrusted them with his Word who thought they should see round about them the Gentiles abounding with idolatry and all maner of sin yet they must not follow them therein But as I have set you out from all other for my self saith the Lord so set your selves apart to my use and service and be ye holy to me as ye observe me to be Hence learn That Where God bestows on a Land or Corner or Town more mercies then on others he looks they should not be as other places that have not had the same favors but have been left to themselves but abounding in holiness holy as he himself is holy Here I might speak of this Land what God hath done for it and what he expects at our hands even that we should be better then any other Nation and then how we are so far from being more holy then others that if any Nation have any sin we get it from them and appropriate it to our selves What should I speak of the common sins of the times The last Assizes and every one shews what state we are in what horrible incests the daughter being with childe by her own father and the Wife burning the childe another ravishing his own daughter being thereof accused by his own childe and wife What cruel murthers besides the common mother sins ignorance extream worldliness and that overspreading canker and leprosie of this Land the contempt of good persons If any be more forward careful zealous then the common sort he is hated mocked discouraged all that may be Not the simplest fellow in a Town though he cannot understand one petition of the Lords Prayer but will mock at those that be any thing toward in Religion or forward to hear the Word refrain from disorder and keep the Lords Day c. this sin abounds most fearfully in this Land In other Religions which are indeed false and irreligious look who is most zealous and forward he is most reverenced and regarded onely in the true Religion if any be but careful to bring into use and practise that which he hears knows and dare not do as others but rather reprove them he makes himself as a wondering stock and is hooted as an howl one that shal sure be hoysed up in charges hu●cht at complained of and vexed This sin not repented of nor left wil be the moth confusion of this Land as we may justly fear God is every year upon us with one new punishment or other but they prevail nothing we are as bad stil or worse what therefore may we not look for How sped the Israelites at last we may fear lest God make us as famous for judgement as we have been for mercies we may fear that it shall be said of all that pass by How is this famous nation become thus desolate and answered Because they despised the Lord his Gospel and servants after many mercies bestowed upon them to have brought them in love therewith Be ye holy c. Some urge this exhortation and the like to establish Free-will but without cause They shew not what we can but what we should do and what God will require of the wicked or else condemn them and what he will enable his servants unto as give their endeavor thereto to the wicked they are commandments of conviction which God may justly require of them because he made them able to do the same to his servants they are not so but with the exhortation he conveys such grace as whereby they are enabled to do the same Lastly this place is abused by sundry to cry down the married estate to magnifie single life but there is no holiness in the one more then in the other for neither if we marry not have we the more as the Apostle speaketh about eating or marry have we the less the Kingdom of God not consisting in these things The benefit of the one more then the other consists onely in this That a single life hath freedom from many troubles and cares and so more liberty to every good duty but this gift is given but to few therefore rather then they should live discontentedly he perswades them to marry Let them therefore that live single take heed they put no holiness therein or think that thereby they please God the more but rather let them use it well and profit thereby in being so much the more zealous and forward in every good work publike and private else that their single life will one day be a witness against them but especially take heed of a filthy
themselves equal with him two vile ends for the maner also there are great odds God effects it thus He makes man an holy and happy creature gives him a commandment to exercise his obedience gives him power to obey useth reasons to have him take heed of breaking it threatens death thereupon onely leaves him to himself and to the Devils temptations yet sufficiently armed to resist him onely follows him not with new grace which he was not bound to do Who can finde any fault in this The Devil effects it by alluring and tempting them to do that which God forbade and that by his vile lyes Adam and Eve they believe the Devil and break the Commandment of their Creator Who can herein lay any thing to Gods charge or have cause to complain Hath the Devil nothing done but what he perswaded to Hath Adam and Eve nothing done but what they voluntarily without any compulsion yielded unto Have their Posterity Neither for 1. The godly they are restored to a better condition in Christ then they lost in Adam 2. The wicked they are never punished till they have justly deserved it by their own sins therefore it s without cause to complain So is God just Man and the Devil to be condemned What! shall they be blamed for doing the will of God for doing that which he had decreed They aymed at no such end but to fulfil their own lusts therefore are they justly to be blamed 1. This setteth out the exceeding goodness and mercy of God thus graciously to plot a remedy so soon which no man could have done God like a Father did plot and forecast for us If we had been left without a remedy or must have shifted for one it had gone ill with us Now as this should make us love the Lord for his goodness and care so what a comfort is this to poor souls that seeing their misery desire above all the world to be delivered out of the same Shall these miss of it if they seek it of God with humble heart If the Lord had this care of his Church ere it was will he suffer it to want any thing now that is if it seek it of him Did the Lord ordain a remedy before the world was was he so careful and now will he not bestow this remedy on all that truly desire it Will a Father be so provident to lay up corn and necessaries into his house before there be need of them and when need is and the children call and cry for bread will he deny it them 2. This should marvellously provoke all to labor for their part in Christ Was he fore-ordained of the Father and did he come and suffer and shall we not lay out for him O monstrous carelesness and unthankfulness yet how few seek him how few seek him aright Few seek him as a Savior fewer as their Lord and King most so coldly as that they shall not obtain such a benefit as this 3. This sheweth that as God ordained some to Salvation before the world which was the cause of ordaining Christ so this was most free for what could we do to move him before we were before the world was No as God sent his Son into the world of his meer mercy so he ordained him of the same 4. If Christ were thus ordained then he is no new Savior but the Lamb slain from the beginning of the world by whom all the Fathers have been saved Abraham saw his day and believed therefore none needs doubt or fear to trust in him He that believeth in him shall never be confounded nor make haste O that the Jews and Turks would believe this but they will one day be confounded with shame and make haste to seek another Savior when their former shall fail them 5. Lay for Christ ere thou lay a foundation for the world let him be first sought after Till we have Christ neither our persons nor works please God nor have we right to the things of the world nor any promise of blessing Before the foundation of the world As the foundation of the world was laid so it may and shall be unlaid and pull'd down and that by him that laid it The time will come when the Elements shall melt c. when the earth with all the works therein shall be consumed with fire As all things here be frail and of no continuance or certainty but subject to many alterations so the world it self that hath worn out many generations of people it self shall have an end already waxeth old Trust not to it it will deceive all that do It s like a great round Bowl whereon if a man should offer to stand it would roll away and lay him under feet if not break his back Too too many break themselves with the world onely Heaven lies foursquare But was manifest He is manifested three ways 1. By the Word and Sacraments 2. By his coming in the flesh 3. By his last coming to Judgement Here the second is chiefly meant for he was revealed in all Ages to our Forefathers in the Word and Sacraments but yet not so evidently and clearly as in our times in these last times wherein he was made manifest in the flesh Note here 1. The constancy and unchangeableness of the Lord who as he Ordained Christ before the world so he sent him in due time into the world The Lord is not as man that he should lye or repent his purposes are unvariable and his promises most certain and sure he wants no power to effect his Decrees and Purposes No length of time could make him alter or fail neither the wretchedness of the Age that he came in which was wofully corrupt when even they that bare the Name of the Church were defiled in Judgement and Conversation God notwithstanding would accomplish his purpose So it is with every one whom he elected before the world he will not lose one but in time afford them effectual means for Faith and Repentance no length of time no mans badness shall hinder this work The Lord had decreed to call and make his Covenant with Abraham and yet what was he but a blinde Idolater till God called him What also Paul who notwithstanding was ordained from his Mothers womb nay before the world to be a special instrument in the Church 1. This may comfort godly Parents over their children that be yet uncalled they may have hope they be in the compass of Gods election and so that God will one day have mercy on them Oh but they be thus and thus bad It s grievous indeed but that shall not hinder if they belong to Gods election Shall the wretchedness of man make the faith of God of none effect nay let God be true and every man a lyar wheresoever God hath any elect ones he will finde them out and remember them
abominable in the sight of God So impure that we cannot cleanse our selves nay nor desire it conceiving that even our uncleanness is purity and becomes us well So as all the water in the Seas all the help of Men and Angels cannot help us it must be the mighty work of God alone as the very water in Baptism teacheth us This should humble us and make us desire speedily to be cleansed which is by the Blood of Christ Jesus from sin past and from the taint of nature by the Spirit of Sanctification But how few are thus affected how few take knowledge of their uncleanness and that sin doth so defile them 1. There are even open prophane ones which yet seek no washing but refuse it yea think themselves clean enough yea hate them that wallow not in the mire as themselves thinking strange to see any cleanse themselves by the Word and Prayer yea think them strange that will not go on in their filthiness by companying and joyning with them 2. Civil persons can see no such thing therefore few of them are cleansed because few finde themselves leprous and desire to be cleansed let such take knowledge of their uncleanness yea let the civilest know that if they be not born again of water and the holy Ghost they cannot see the Kingdom of God Seek therefore to be purged in time that you may please God and see him for without holiness none shall see him He onely that hath innocent hands and a pure heart shall enter into his Tabernacle else person service and all is loathsom to God and what should such a man do living And the servants of God that are in some measure purged must desire to be more purged of these evils that cleave to them and prevail so much over them and defile even their best duties Your souls Hereby he means the whole man both Body and Soul for God sanctifieth throughout and there the body is Sanctified where there 's Sanctification of the Soul as from which comes the Sanctification of the Body In obeying the truth The Word of God is the outward instrument of our cleansing Thus were Zacheus Mary Magdalene and the Goaler thus also are we sanctified The Law pulling down the Gospel by degrees lifts up working an high prizing of the remedy vehement longing after it at last some perswasion which Faith unites to Christ whereby guiltiness and sin is pardoned in Christs death and corruption being taken away the grace of Sanctification is given which Faith sucketh from Christ the fountain of life so that as he that is out of Christ can do no good so united to him we receive sanctifying grace therefore Faith is said to purifie the heart namely by uniting us to Christ and the Word is the instrument to work Faith Besides the Word purgeth thus not onely setting before us as in a glass all our faults and what we should do but it worketh in us care and conscience to be obedient 1. Therefore thank God for the Word the instrument of purging Where it is not all lie in the mire O how we should desire the free passage of it 2. If we see our children and servants defiled we must bring them to the Word and pray and wait thereon 3. For our selves we are to try whether it hath been effectual to wash us both heart and hand if yea then there 's comfort it hath obtained the right end if not but that we remain in our filthiness or in any part of it willingly it s a fearful sign Many have been cleansed by it what hath it purged us of Hath it washed our mouthes from swearing lying our hands from wrong our eyes from wantonness our hearts from the love of all sin our master sin especially as Zacheus They obeying the Word their Souls and bodies were purged thereby else they could not This is better then Sacrifice and disobedience is that which the Lord cannot away withal but will grievously punish All the stir is about obeying the truth for men can be content to hear but to obey is death O how would the Word purifie men if they would obey it its just with God to take away the Truth from us because we obey it not Truth The Word is called Truth not true onely but Truth the Truth nothing but Truth and in matters of God and our Salvation all the Truth the rule of Truth 1. Then Traditions contrary to this are lyes and whatsoever else 2. It s Blasphemy to speak against this Truth or any part of it 3. Let Gods poor people get the Word on their sides humble persons get a promise and stay upon it against all contrary temptations They are lyes the Word is the truth yet they suffer themselves to be more carried away with a temptation of Satan or that riseth of their own unbelief then they are comforted by three or four plain promises of Gods Word 4. Let the wicked that make such slight account of Gods threatnings know that they shall prove all too true for them they shall not be held guiltless and they go in danger of all Gods wrath and curses every hour and hang over the pit of Hell c. These things move not but the Word ought to make their hearts ake and tremble as who shall one day finde whose word shall stand theirs or the Lords Through the Spirit The inward worker is the Spirit without which all will be in vain It s the Spirit that worketh all from first to last opens the understanding works Faith and then conveys power from Christ to dye to sin and live to righteousness without him we shall have but binde eyes ears stopt no hearing ears he opened the heart of Lydia We must not then trust to our selves or our wit learning and parts but acknowledge the very best thing in us the wisdom of the flesh to be enmity against God Nor must we trust to any Preacher in the world for its God onely that giveth the encrease but ever come in humility calling upon God both on our own and the Preachers behalf that God would give us his Spirit to make all effectual that through him we may understand believe and obey Unto unfained love of the brethren Hence note 1. That till a man be cleansed by the Spirit of Sanctification he is not fit to do any good no not for love for the heart must first be emptied of the love of all evil ere the love of any good can take place The garden must be rid of weeds and stones ere we sow and plant For those therefore that declare by their loosness that there remaineth the love of some lust in them it s as sure as God is in heaven for all the countenance they make of Religion and shew of profession and good things there
though it be but in small matters yet he will hold it out though the other be never so peremptory till in conclusion they fall flat out this is nought in small matters it were better to yield so in Dealings Covenants Bargains Bonds men will have their right herein right may be extream wrong always provided that we give not away anothers right especially Gods Moses would not yield an hoof yet most men are stiff in their own will yield enough of Gods right as they will not suffer their Servants to play one hour in the week day but for the Lords day they will suffer them therein to play as much as they will 3. Whereas love does no hurt to any Whence comes all the hurt and mischief in the world Stabbing Fighting Quarrelling Railing Reviling Scolding Crying all the defiling of mens Wives Children Servants So for Oppression Bribery Thievery Cousenage false Weights deceitful Wares So Slandering Defaming Backbiting Mocking All these abound in the World I am sure they come not of Love it was never at the doing of them and those that will so readily provoke one another by words and deeds they care not how are far enough from love 4. For being provoked O Lord be merciful to us who can bear any thing but taunt for taunt quip for quip he shall have as good as he brings is common with every one How do men stand upon every small trespass Hence the innumerable Contentions and Suits in the Land thousands in a year for meer trifles wherein ten times as much is spent then is sued for which is a shame for England having had the Gospel of Peace so long Oh mens stomacks be up straight all their blood in their faces or looking as pale as ashes or secretly practising to revenge hand on the Dagger straight straight on the top of the house fly in our Neighbors face by and by so little love is there to forgive till Seventy I may say till Seven times so short Spirited as we can bear nothing and that which is worse if we have once taken up a displeasure it s not easily laid down but Sun after Sun Moon after Moon yea Year after Year it continueth quickly provoked hardly pacified especially truly It may be we live not in open enmity yet in secret grudging the heart not sound but ready to break out upon every occasion can abide nothing but Revenge which is fearful 5. Where is communicating of Spiritual good things Parents bring up their children brave but how few Catechize Counsel and Instruct them pray with or for them So for Servants They give them Meat Drink and Wages with work enough on the six days little caring how they spend the Lords day neither instructing them examining them or drawing them to hear the Word or Read and Pray What love call you this shew you not as much to your Beasts So for our Neighbors who admonisheth them that be out of the way do we not rather let them run on talking of their Infirmities behinde their backs and spreading them to their grace Nay do not many yea most rejoyce thereat what consolation to the heavy who takes it to heart how few are able to comfort fitly but utter vain idle if not more hurtful words to to such nay many rather laugh and jest at heavy conscienced persons every man saith Is he is Brothers keeper Nay alas so far from communicating Spiritual grace to them which they ought or to call one another to go to the house of God as they rather use all means by jesting at them troubling them c. to discourage them yea how many have given lewd and wicked counsels to others to the dishonor of God For outward things how backward are most from giving any more then they needs must What contentions at making of Rates For lending where is this but rather as if God had never given precept for it or as if it were like a Statute repealed which is of no use so is this duty That cursed Trade of Lending upon Usury hath eaten up and banished out of the Countrey this Christian duty of free lending What rich man hath almost at any time any thing to lend Some are so grim and austere as a poor man dares not speak to them for such a thing Some put so much to Usury as they neglect their Trading set none a work nor have ought to lend at any time but rather borrow and if a poor man happen to do any work for them they cannot pay him in a good while they are so bare for as soon as any money comes in it must out straight to Use as if it would burn a hole in their Cupboard if it lay there two or three days or a week Others are ever Purchasing and are ever in debt and will be then wrangle at Rates grudge at this and that are never fit to lend such bring a curse upon themselves willingly which is to borrow when as they might else lend Others are so miserable that though they have wherewith yet will not lend So for Neighborly dealing inviting visiting c. Love is very cold Here I may adde That there 's a great deal of counterfeit love Pot-companionship and joyning in vanity a deal of fawning crouching conguing c. a great deal of self-love making others faults great and their own small or none nay sometimes extenuating and making light of the vertues of others highly esteeming their own being ready to provoke and wrong others but bearing nothing straight provoked seeking their own in all their dealings and courses so making sure for themselves without regard to their Neighbors These be the times Now let every man examine himself and see how it s with himself in these who findes not himself ready to take things at the worst and have we not often done so when as afterward having heard that it was nothing so but quite otherwise we have been put to shame and forced to say for our own excuse We heard or thought it had been so The like might be particularized in the rest 3. The causes of the want of love 1. Want or weakness of Faith when our Savior taught his Apostles this Duty they said Lord encrease our Faith Assurance of pardon makes us forgive 2. Pride whereby men think highly of themselves meanly of others think they may speak or do any thing but that others may say or do nothing to them Onely by Pride comes contention but humbleness causeth love Pride makes men think themselves so wise and good as every body should say as they say and yield in all things to them when they do not they break the peace as Haman with Mordecai Pride cannot endure a reproof therefore could not Herod abide John Ahab Elijah and Micaiah Pride makes men think so highly of themselves and meanly of others that they will not bear any wrong but take the least in scorn 3. Covetousness this makes
men contend for trifles Oppress use false weights and sleights as also hinders from inviting and meeting together 4. Envy at the thriving and wealth of others about them or equal to them as Labans sons did at Jacob Cain that Abels Sacrifice was better regarded then his Esau that Jacob was blessed and Ismael that Isaac was the son of the Promise 5. Frowardness and shortness of spirit breaks love very often for angry words stir up strife 6. These very days of peace make men grow hollow and strange and to set little one by another As when Sheep see a Dog they run all together so trouble makes men to make much one of another whereas its otherwise in peace These be woful causes 4. The effects of this want of love are lamentable every where both in Church and Commonwealth O what woful breaches and contentions what wrongs and enmities So in Families so among particular persons how break they out to the dishonor of God yea sometimes Professors one with another to the shame of their Profession the interrupting of their Prayers or either the hindring of themselves from the Sacrament as many a time it is or slubbering it over and coming with festred hearts and so depriving themselves of the benefit thereof nay provoking the Lord by their unworthy receiving Seeing these things be so O let every one of us finding our selves faulty humble our selves crave mercy and labor to be reformed herein To this end learn we to pluck out of our hearts those noysom weeds that this precious plant of love may grow We must strive against infidelity and labor for more faith In humbleness of minde we must labor to esteem every one better then our selves we must labor for a moderate affection to outward things setting more by peace then them we must also avoid envy We have more then we could have look'd for Is our eye evil because our Masters is good we must also cease from frowardness and be gentle and meek and labor we that this love to our brethren may shew forth it self in all good fruits as in judging the best departing from our right not provoking or being easily provoked but forbearing and forgiving Alas we have need that others should forgive us for who lives and is not subject to offend God forgives us many and great debts and shall we catch our neighbor by the throat God bids us ask forgiveness on no other condition but to forgive our offenders and there 's no better sign that a man is forgiven of God then to shew mercy to men none can be assured of that but they will forgive Let us therefore from the sea of compassion that God sheddeth out upon us let fall some drop thereof on our neighbors and not seek revenge which every bad man yea beast can do but pass by offences which is the glory of a man Besides revenge is the Lords Office and to revenge is indeed to resist the Lord without whose Providence nothing is done this kept David from revenging himself on Shimei Not to revenge is always the best way for us and the worst for him that wrongs us There 's no dealing with a man that commits his cause to God more safe to anger a Witch then an Innocent meek spirited man that hath his recourse to God thou hadst better deal with one that will take revenge on thee to the uttermost To this end keep we out anger if we can if not yet let it not rest in us as it were sowring in our hearts Let not the Sun go down upon it This indeed the world accounts a base thing but its honorable it makes us like God Neither must we labor for this a little or some few times but for a long skirted love that will cover even a multitude of offences And let our love shew it self in giving Spiritual and Temporal things for God gives to good and bad and makes us but Stewards of that he gives us that we may dispense the same yea the more we give the more we have as which encreaseth by giving and for Temporal things the high-way to thrive therein is to be merciful as to beggary to be pinching 5. The general reasons inciting to this duty of love 1. God requireth it of us who is love and if we perform it we do not so much serve our Neighbor as please God who takes it as done to himself If we neglect it we neglect not our Neigbor onely but God who takes himself wronged in this point 2. We are all one flesh and all have some part of the Image of God upon us But for the people of God 1. We be members of the same body The members of the Natural body not onely hurt not but help each other else quickly would the body be brought to confusion 2. Brethren not Natural ones but a better Brotherhood a nearer Bond Now between Brethren there must be no contention and it were a shame for such to contend 3. Both the Word requires it and the Sacrament of the Lords Supper calls for and puts us in minde of it 4. No better Argument that we are in the light love God are Christs Disciples and translated from death to life then this 5. The beauty of a Christian is love he 's the best Christian who loves most whose lips feed most whose branches spread widest 6. As it brings us much peace to our conscience and will comfort us not a little on our death-bed that we have not lived to our selves but to be useful to many especially to Souls so it procureth us love in the places we live in and in the Church of God where we have a good name No man is well beloved though he have good things in him if he be not loving Oh say they he is a good honest man but a harsh Censurer Contentious and so hasty that no man can tell how to speak to him he is a strait man no man is the better for him by counsel encouragement admonition so for other things But if a man be full of love Oh it shall procure him love again he shall be commended while he lives and mourned for when he dyes as they wept for Dorcas but a proud churlish close man he shall live without being desired and dye without being mourned for Many would have Love and Good-will and Credit but will not seek this way to procure it they live closely to themselves neither being useful or any way liberal to their Neighbors let them never look for it Many care not so they may scrape all to themselves for their good name let it go whether it will but these are bafounded and its a curse so to live Thus in general In particular Touching the love to the Children of God which is here chearfully called for consider we both the duty and the maner how it s to be performed For the duty it self it
thereof whereby it hath a deadly wound given it which it shall never recover so from his Burial his Spirit conveyeth power to hold under our corruptions that they get head no more so from his Resurrection power to rise to newness of life so that now being graft into such a living stock by such a cunning hand of the Spirit of God the Regenerate man receiveth vertue accordingly He was before a branch of the wilde olive but now of the true olive therefore the fruits are and must needs be accordingly so that though he sinneth yet it s not as before before he was guided by the Spirit of Satan and the world now by the holy Spirit of God and therefore must needs bring forth the fruits of holiness as it is holy must needs be renewed throughout though not wholly and perfectly 1. Here 's a great comfort to Gods children and infinite cause have they to praise God that whereas before they brought forth nothing but fruit unto death now they are enabled to bring forth fruit to God and to life before servants to the flesh reaping corruption now to the Spirit the fruit thereof being everlasting life There must needs be joy in doing such work 2. This condemneth them that say they believe and they are converted and hope to be saved by Jesus Christ and yet continue in their course No every one that 's in Christ is a new creature it s a disgrace to Christ to say such fruit comes from him 7. The growth of one that 's truly Regenerate he is not at his pitch the first day It s not with him as with Adam who was perfect at once in his creation but he comes to it by degrees as every thing that moveth from one place to another doth it in some space of time so in this motion from sin to righteousness and life eternal it s done in time and by degrees and that not in all alike But as some men are of greater stature some of smaller and sometimes the yonger are taller then the elder so it may be in this but all do and must grow and that by the Ministery of the Word and Sacraments as Corn by the early and latter rain springs up by degrees and a Babe first small and weak yet by good tendance and Gods blessings grows bigger and stronger in every part then can go alone speak digest strong meat begin to bear burthens and do the works of a man so must a Christian grow from a Babe to be stronger to digest strong meat higher Points of Doctrine to be able to go alone in good Duties by the finger as in Prayer Reading anothers Prayer but now can go alone in it so in other Duties then stronger to bear Afflictions Temptations Mocks Discouragements and also to put up wrongs and go through duty and service 1. This may rebuke them that are so far from growing as they go back and are worse then sometimes they were These may suspect that either they never begun in truth but were suddenly moved had but some common gifts and were but built upon the Sand or else that they have ill behaved themselves beginning in the Spirit to end in the Flesh Were you too well what fault found you that you are weary and gone back to your old Master If you belong to God and do not awaken your selves the Lord will whip you home will send you as Runnagates to the house of Correction 2. For those that stand at a stay and no difference can be discerned between that they were many years ago and now they also are in a woful case Doth not a man look his childe should grow in learning every year and would it not grieve if he should stand always at one stay We love to see our children grow and would grieve to see them Dwarfs and no bigger now then they were many years ago and have we no care of our own or their growth in grace As men every year aym more and more to grow in wealth and as in a Race men press hard forward towards the mark so should we to grow in grace But why do men grow no faster A. 1. Some are proud and conceited they have more then they have and so strive not 2. Some compare themselves with them that are under them and not with them that exceed them in grace and so think they have enough whereas in worldly things they reach always at those above that they may not onely equal them but over-top them 3. Some are so cloyed with the love of the world and multitude of businesses that they can spare no time for this This is the bane of Religion and hinders from many a duty publike and private choking the Word in the obedience thereto and practice thereof and causing many a duty to be but poorly performed 4. Ill company is as great a hinderance to Spiritual growth as the East and North winds to tender flowers and plants 5. Neglecting and failing of the means of growing as if any man want his meals he will soon faint and if any Tradesman want his Markets he will soon be Bankrupt 6. Some use them negligently as Hearing Praying c. and thrive accordingly He that keeps the Market but once in a moneth will not gain much so they that hear the Word but now and then at their leisure will not get forward very fast especially they that keep not the main Market nay the Mart of their Souls The Lords day when they should make off their corruptions and provide themselves with all Spiritual commodities 7. Such as hear often but without preparation before or regard after Do men thrive by meat taken into a full or foul stomack or by swallowing their meat whole no more shall we Spiritually thrive though we swallow down whole Sermons unless we chew them by Meditation and Practice they will never nourish us And whereas many humble Souls complain that they do not grow though earnestly desirous thereof and diligent in the use of the means they must examine themselves whether indeed they have used the means and that diligently with preparation and prayer If not they must reform the same if yea they may be of good comfort for assuredly they cannot but grow somewhat though not as they would They must yet be constant and that God who hath given them an heart to use the means of growing will also enable them to grow we must be growing as long as we live here If we had Methuselahs years to live and still took pains yet still there would be work so hard is it to get victory over and to subdue this Army of our lusts and to draw dry this ocean of our corrupt affections Blessed is he that makes this his chief or onely work to mortifie more and more his sinful nature applying the Word Promises Threats Mercies Judgements general particular on our selves or others To this end God
so shall our reward be great above others if we be unfaithful we must look for greater damnation as being treacherous in so weighty a work 2. For people how ought they to regard Gods faithful Ministers that watch over their Souls Alas how little are they regarded how poorly maintained every thing too much every little enough for them whereas Lawyers Physicians c. live wealthily are much sought to It s a plain sign men love their Bodies better then their Souls and the Earthly Inheritance better then the Heavenly Which liveth and abideth for ever These words spoken of God are to shew how it comes to pass that the Word is able to Regenerate and beget us to a new and immortal life namely because it is the Word of him who liveth and giveth life to all and endureth for ever If it were not the Word of such a one it could not for as for the word of man it can do no such matter All the wisdom of all the men of the world put together and used to perswade a sinner are not able to change his heart The word of a man can but stir up that in a man which is in him already but to put any thing into him that was not in him it cannot 1. This teacheth us to preach the pure Word of God purely and not our own Devices for what is the chaff to the wheat not any word of man this or that how wise or ancient soever can put life into a man So nor to mingle mans word with Gods it hath no need of help from mans testimony let it alone it shall be able to perform that which its appointed for The Word of God is sharp enough to divide between the joynts and the marrow though it be not whetted on this or that mans Grindstone As Pearls need no painting so that which is of incomparable power and is pronounced to be mighty hath no need of the help of weak man 2. Let him that is born anew by the preaching of the Word be well assured he shall live and endure for ever as God so liveth and endureth as every one that is not begotten thereby shall through Gods judgement live after a sort and abide for ever but it shall be in everlasting wo and misery Verse 24. For all flesh is as grass and all the glory of man as the flower of grass the grass withereth and the flower thereof falleth away Verse 25. But the Word of the Lord endureth for ever and this is the word which by the Gospel is preached unto you THe Apostle now laboreth to make men labor for their part in this Regeneration whereof he had spoken and that is by shewing the miserable state of a carnal and unregenerate man and that a man without this hath nothing that good is nothing that can please God that can stand him in stead and bring him to Salvation for whatsoever is in man besides this is flesh is corrupt and sinful and so consequently vain and vanishing as grass yea the best thing that is or can be in an unregenerate man is but as a flower that fadeth soon away and cannot abide the heat of the Sun no more can any thing in an unregenerate man abide the censure and judgement of Almighty God and this he doth to drive as well carnal men out of themselves and make them labor for this grace of Regeneration as to stir up them that were Regenerate to be thankful to God for this marvellous work and labor to walk worthy of it in all fruits of holiness and obedience Now having laid out the misery of a carnal men yet he leaves him not so but tells him that there is a means to help this and to bring him to an happy state and to live for ever namely The Word of God which endureth for ever whereby the Soul is converted Faith wrought we united to Christ and fetch from him as pardon of sin by his death and favor by his obedience so ability to live the life of grace here and the life of glory hereafter But lest any should say But where is this Word that is able to do thus wonderfully for us and how must it be dealt with to make it thus effectual for our Regeneration He tells them that its among them and being sincerely preached and humbly heard believed and obeyed would become effectual to their Salvation In the words we have both the Law and the Gospel 1. The miserable state of all unregenerate men 2. The mean to make us live for ever Both these are set down in two Propositions The first concerning the base estate of a carnal man hath two branches one a degree above another The first that all flesh that is whosoever is carnal and unregenerate is grass that is frail brittle fickle perishing which is not onely in respect of his bodily estate but any thing else in him The second that the glory of man that is the best things that be or can be in him are as the flower of grass vain and vanishing The second concerns the Word of the Lord that it endureth for ever and that to make us live for ever by uniting us to Christ the Fountain of life The words are taken out of Isa. 40. 6 7 8. where note by the way that no text is ever cited out of the Apocrypha the Apostle being guided by the same Spirit that the Prophet was looking upon the same sense not standing precisely upon the very words All flesh is as grass Though it be not chiefly meant of the frailty and brittleness of our bodily condition yet it is also included of which a little This our life is often compared to grass and that fitly for as grass is subject to come to an end many ways so we It may be blasted with the East-wind as soon as ever it peers out of the ground if not that yet in the spring the beasts will crop and bite it off if it miss both these yet the mower will cut it down with his sithe if it escape all these yet there is one thing coming that it cannot escape namely the cold frosty winter whereby it must needs wither away So we may be blasted as soon as we be born how many have dyed the same day they have been born or shortly after if we scape then yet some disease may bite us in our youth or if we miss both these death with his sithe may cut us down in our middle age but if yet we scape the winter notwithstanding of old age will wither us away and we cannot shift it Alas we are as a bubble a vapor of no continuance so vain a thing is man lighter then vanity A little too much heat or cold * a little blow with a Horse foot a bad savour or the like can quickly make an end of us Alas we carry the matter of many diseases daily about us in
our bosoms and bowels insomuch that all must dye It s so appointed It cannot be shifted It s the way of all flesh high and low This grim Sergeant knocks at every door spares none will not be bribed by any Money Physick Wit Wealth cannot free us from it even Methuselah dyed They that have been most unwilling yet have dyed where are all our Forefathers where all the mighty Monarchs long since gone and so must we there 's no remedy yet we know not when to day or to morrow this year or the next nor where at home or abroad in our bed or in the fields by sea or land nor how of a natural or violent death Here to day to morrow gone The fairest flower may be soon welked A few years ago we said Our Fathers and Mothers are dead and shortly our Children will say so of us one Generation passeth another succeedeth 1. This may well serve to humble us pull down our Peacocks plumes Alas why should we be proud proud against God as most be to shake off his commandment to stand in no awe of his Word but to do that which he flatly forbids nay though he threaten never so severely O thou poor Worm thou Snail what art thou poor Potsheard that darest lift up thy self against thy Maker the mighty and glorious Lord of Heaven and Earth shouldest thou not fall down at his footstool and say Speak Lord for thy poor Creature is ready to do whatsoever thou requirest as its right meet and my bounden duty so to do proud against our Neighbors what art thou that liftest up thy self proudly vaunting of thy Beauty Birth Strength c. mayest thou not be laid full low ere to morrow Night what art thou that treadest others down by thy greatness mayest thou not be laid where others shall tread on thee and that shortly what art thou who so proudly deckest thy self with endless cost and time why dost thou so gorgeously set out and take such delight in a piece of clay may it not lie by the walls this week may not a Tuft of grass be cut down this night O that there should be such excess cost vain fangles endless and too much time spent in trimming up the body and no care of decking the soul O this curious and long dressing and pinning is but for a day and yet what a great deal of precious time is spent this way Also what art thou that bearest malice against thy Neighbor and will not be pacified but threatnest to be revenged Alas poor soul where mayest thou be ere that time lay down thy displeasure to day lest thou dye to morrow and dye in wrath 2. This may abate our care for the world O how do men toil and care as if they were to live here and never dye when as dye they shall and that haply very suddenly 3. This should make us labor always to be prepared for death To this end 1. Labor to be assured of the forgiveness of our sins and that the book be crost the reckonings cancel'd and God at peace with us wo be to him that dyes these things being not discharged But alas most as if they were not enough indebted already run on more and more 2. Walk ever carefully in the fear of God that we may be found well-doing but how do most live in sin that they are unfit to dye 3. Be we not fettered nor intangled with the profits pleasures and excessive cares of this life 4. Imploy we our selves carefully in some measure about the work whereunto we are called 5. Wait we for the Lords coming being always desirous thereof 4. It should make us seeing we be but grass not to promise great matters of our selves We will do this or that We will be revenged of him ere seven years come to an end We will go and buy and sell and get gain and tarry thus long We will repent seven or ten years hence Alas poor fool art thou not ashamed to shew thy folly Alas poor Creature whereof art thou made Thou thinkest of heart of Oak Marble or Cedar remember thou art but grass Reckon not without thine Hoast boast not of to morrow Be we hereby stirred up to do all the good we can while we may and work while its day If thou hast to repent do it to day hear this Sermon keep well this Sabbath thou knowest not but it may be the last come this Communion thou knowest not whether thou shalt live till another 6. Never trust to any mortal friends haply they may be gone when thou shalt have most need of them and when they might do thee most good Trust in God that lives for ever who is Almighty ever a merciful Father and a Friend to his So make the best use of any friend while thou hast him People of their good Ministers Husbands of their gracious Wives Children of their godly Parents c. Thou knowest not how soon they may be taken from thee we shall hear lamentings after the death of such buts it more wisdom to make use of them while they be with us so for thy Enemies fear them not too much they are but grass they may be taken away ere the time come wherein they should have hurt thee 7. For our Children delight not too much in them for their beauty stature growth they are but grass If we set our minde too much on them while we have them we will be too excessively grieved when God takes them from us love them moderately of Gods blessings If we bring them up in the fear as God that they may prove gracious and instruments to honor God in Church and Common-wealth we do well Take heed we prank them not up too much or too much cocker them and give them the head as David to Absolom and Adonijah as also that we rake not greedily for them and so hinder God of his service If they be perkt up to high or regarded more then the glory of God it s the next way to provoke God to pull them down And all the glory of man as the flower of grass Not onely the glory of men as Nobles Princes Great-men High-born Wise Witty Learned and the like which are the chief are as flowers somewhat finer and fairer then grass in colour of them some fairer then some but even the greatest man is but a flower that for all the beauty fades assoon as another But this is the meaning that The glory of a carnal man is but a vain thing and the best part of an unregenerate man is corrupt the best gift is but vain our understanding not dark but darkness The natural man perceiveth not the things of the Spirit of God neither can flesh and blood reveals no such things to him Our understanding is altogether blinde in the first Table unless it be for some few general notions
that serve to leave us without excuse as That there is a God That he must be served but what and who he is and how to be served alas here we dote Hence have risen so many thousand Inventions Images Idols so many kindes of Services in all Nations Turning the glory of the incorruptible God into the similitude of a corruptible man calf creeping thing c. In the second Table God for the preservation of civil society hath left a little more light to discern between right and wrong just and unjust good and evil as appears by the Laws of the Heathens against vices and for vertues yet herein how blinde is carnal man In the general he holds adultery murther c. to be evil but in particular lust and anger practised by himself not so or but a little but for concupiscence original sin the root of them alas this is quite hidden So for our will it s altogether corrupt and rebellious it ought to be guided by Reason yet often when Reason speaks and would guide right it will not onely not be ruled but will over-rule Reason as the horses draw Coach and Coachman over hills and dales whither they list yea all that is in us is onely evil Our Righteousness is like a filthy clout we are not able to think a good thought In me that is in my flesh saith the Apostle dwelleth no good thing The wisdom of the flesh is not onely an enemy but enmity against God and our own conversion and Salvation and we are dead in sins and trespasses and so cannot stand before God our sins must be taken away in Christ and Christs righteousness imputed to us and put upon us we must also be purged and renewed Either must our righteousness exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees who yet were very strict and civil or we cannot enter into the Kingdom of Heaven What if a man could rule Towns Countreys and Commonwealths as long as he hath no true rule over his own heart according to Gods Word What though a man could compound all the controversies between man and man in a Countrey and were reputed the wisest man therein yet if he know not the great controversie that sin hath made between God and himself and seek and know that compounded in Christ what would it avail him What if a man were never such a skilful Lawyer and could help every man to his inheritance if he knew not that hell were his inheritance by nature and labored for a better and for the same shew good evidence What if a man were so skilful in Physick as he knew the cases and cures of all diseases if he know not the Spiritual diseases of his soul and how they must be cured in the blood of Jesus Christ. This may stir up all men to examine themselves in what state they stand If thou hast not felt an Almighty work of God in thee to renew and alter thee throughout then art thou yet but a carnal and unregenerate man then thou art in a woful case thou hast nothing that can please God what shall become of thee rest not in this state O that people could be perswaded of their woful and wretched miserable state then were it easie to perswade them to seek to have it bettered The Lord ferret you out of your holes and muses that you have to lurk in Alas they will not all hide you f●om the All-seeing eye and justice of God O pitty thy soul This is the first step to Heaven to know thy naked case Take out this first Lesson Thou canst never learn any other till this be learned Thou that hast not learned this as most have not thou hast learned nothing to do thee good by all the Sermons which thou hast at any time heard The grass withereth and the flower thereof falleth away Even so whatsoever is or can be in a meer unregenerate man when it comes to the Lords examination it will not abide but vanisheth away as snow on the Sun-fide of the house and Butter before the fire But the Word of the Lord endureth for ever Having told them of their misery without Regeneration he leaves them not there but tells them of a remedy To what purpose were it to tell one of his nakedness unless he were also told how to come by clothing that he is sick unless he be told how he may be cured to rake in the wound and sore unless a Playster be applyed This were but to encrease a mans grief so to Preach mans misery and there leave were to drive a man to dispair were either to make men blockishly careless what they did or desperately to rage and run into the Gulf of all impiety seeing there is no remedy The Apostle therefore doth both teaching Ministers wisely to joyn Law and Gospel together we must not onely tell people of a remedy in general so leaving them to se●k it themselves but prescribe them the way by dutiful attendance to the Word of God else they are like to do as sick folks that having no counsel from the Physician take things of their own head which rather increase the disease then otherwise even by some blinde courses of their devising seek a remedy which will do them no good The Word of the Lord is the means appointed of him to make us live that be dead to convert the Soul to work Faith whereby we are united to Christ the fountain of life It s the Conduit pipe whereby God conveyeth the life that is in him into us without the Word we are sta●k dead where that fails the people perish without the Word I say we are but dead men and we must dye and perish eternally if it help us not But if it be carefully heard believed and obeyed it will bring us to everlasting life to an enduring state in Grace and Glory 1. O then wherewith shall this Word be prized If even a Soul be more worthy then all the world what is it worth that saves Souls O no marvel though David said it was better then gold and silver and sweeter then honey O how thankful should we be to God for this rich treasure hidden from most part of the world he hath given his Statutes to Jacob he hath not dealt so with other Nations what if we had this whole worlds wealth amongst us if we had not the Word of God O what are we that we should be preferr'd before so many great Countreys and innumerable people O how great is the unthankfulness of this Land that set so little by it why are the people so shie and so hardly drawn to the preaching of the Word Is it not some great hurt it would do them It s even this It would make them of sinners converted persons bringing Salvation to their house of dead make them alive and to live for ever without it we are sure
to dye and that eternally 2. To answer the prophane world that wonders at people that take pains winter and summer to travel and take such journeys to the Word they think they be fools and laugh at them What do they mean say they What mean they they seek to have their Souls saved if you have any greater business in hand then that or know a better way to effect it then the preaching of the Word you should do well to set about it But if ye do neither of these as I know ye do not then cease marvelling at them and give them leave rather to marvel at you that can be so careful for toys and so careless of your Souls for the time to come 3. If we have the Word of God which is sufficient and appointed to save our Souls then how dare the Brownists separate themselves from us Peter would not from Christ when being asked of him whether he would go away Master saith he whether shall I go thou hast the words of eternal life yea though there may be some things amiss and where at they are offended yet seeing there is sufficient to the Salvation of our Souls we ought to take heed of departing from those places where such means are they will go farther and speed worse Again whereas they call our Ministers Antichristian and B●alitical Priests c. what gross wrong is this will God bless the labors of such to the winning of Souls Have not sundry Ministers among us through Gods goodness been the instruments of converting many to God Paul took that as a good Seal of his Apostleship that he had been so blessed Of the Lord This is to exclude all mens Traditions false Scriptures c. which have no such power and to stop the mouthes of Enthusiasts that depend upon immediate Revelations from God as though the Scriptures were insufficient And this is the word which by the Gospel is preached unto you Where is the Word might they say and how must it be handled to make it thus effectual He answereth If it be effectually preached as it is among you this is the means it s not in heaven but among you and by preaching its made the instrument of Regeneration For How shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard and It pleased God by the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe The Eunuch having that by preaching opened and applied to him which he read was thereupon converted that which could not be done by bare reading was done by preaching It s true the Word read and preached are both alike apt to convert in respect of themselves but not in respect of us as whole loaves and bread cut in pieces and made small have like nature and aptness to nourish in respect of themselves but not in respect of us for whole loaves will not enter into the mouth nor into the stomack or if they could be there so fit to digest as when cut small yea and chewed for then its fit So a sentence of Scripture must be broken and divided into Doctrine and Use then its fit and not till then to nourish us so that the cause why the Word read is not so apt to Regenerate and nourish us as the Word preached is not in the Word it self but in us in respect of our weakness that cannot conceive it nor yet apply it to our selves Therefore they that would have bare reading in Congregations and that as sufficient for the Salvation of a Congregation they are Enemies to the Souls of Gods people True it is the reading of the Word as well privately as publikely in the Congregation is an exercise both holy and profitable and hath ever been used in the Church of God and is to this day but yet not as sufficient as the other to Salvation Preached This he addeth that they might not look that God should speak to them from Heaven or by an Angel he hath thought good to speak unto us by men whom he sends to preach unto us Unto you In that it was preached as to others so also to them note That the Word ought to be preached in every particular Congregation They that have it not must seek it elsewhere for it will not avail them that its preached in the same Land Countrey or corner except they also have it preached nor yet will this serve for their excuse We had it not in our Town If light be come into the world we must seek after it as men go from Market to Market for provision And if the Word be truly preached in any Congregation the people ought in any wise to attend there and wait for a blessing thereon They must not discourage their Ministers through their absence but rather by their presence and prayers for them in preaching and themselves in hearing help them forward And this is the word c. Peter boldly avoucheth it was the Word of God that was preached among them and therefore that they which resisted it resisted not him but God So must we preach that we may boldly say thus and avouch it Those Ministers that broach Errors and corrupt Opinions or that plead for Baal for this and that Disorder or they that bend the edge of their Ministery against the forward and better sort and so weaken their knees and strengthen the hands of the wicked these cannot thus say This is the Word of God that is preached unto you God would not have said thus neither saith Gods Word thus and they that resist not God but man nay the Devil that moves him to utter these things We ought to take heed not daring to utter any thing but that whereof we may boldly avouch Thus saith the Lord He that speaketh let him speak as the Oracles of God But if we speak nothing but the Truth and as God would let all take heed how they shall dare to resist or gainsay it or not yield obedience thereto for he that resisteth it despiseth his own Salvation and resisteth not a mean man but Almighty God whose Word and Ordinance it is to save the Elect and be sure if it save you not it will condemn you For as the rain cometh down and the snow from Heaven and returneth not thither but watereth the earth and maketh it bring forth and bud that it may give seed to the sower So shall my word be that goeth out of my mouth saith the Lord it shall not return unto me void but shall accomplish that which I please and it shall prosper in the thing whereto I sent it CHAP. II. WE have finished the former Chapter through Gods goodness many that heard the beginning thereof dyed ere we came to the end many dead since We set now upon this second hoping for the same assistance and I pray le ts all attend to the beginning with carefulness for no doubt sundry
of us so frail are we shall never live to the end of it and therefore are to make the best use of that we shall hear In the latter end of the former Chapter he had spoken of Regeneration whereof he was perswaded many of them were partakers now he perswades them to declare and honor that state and calling by a life answerable even an holy conversation both in their general and special callings renouncing the sins and corruption from which they were called and which became not new persons and performing all the contrary good duties beseeming them that are called to the state of grace and hope of glory This whole Chapter contains Exhortations some general to all Christians from the beginning to the thirteenth verse some special from thence to the end In the three first Verses he exhorteth as well to the laying aside some faults as the performance of a most necessary duty The faults to be avoided and abandoned verse 1. The duty to be practiced verse 2. Whereunto is annexed a Reason why they should so earnestly long after and heartily embrace the Word of God even because they had already found some benefit thereof yea the special goodness of God thereby verse 3. CHAP. II. Verse 1. Wherefore laying aside all malice and all guile and hypocrisies and envies and evil speakings Verse 2. As new born babes desire the sincere milk of the Word that ye may grow thereby Verse 3. If so ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious WHerefore laying aside c. Sundry things may be hence observed in general 1. That Regeneration and the love of sin cannot stand together it must needs be accompanied with a new life This is the end of our new birth The life of a Regenerate man must be a continual practice of mortification and study to please God this may be seen from the dependance which this hath with the former Wherefore laying aside c. as if he should say Seeing you are Regenerate and God hath done so much for you as thus and thus therefore we must lay aside c. 1. Here 's reproof for those that bless themselves as if they were Regenerate and Believers who do yet still live in their old lusts Do Vines bear Haws and Brambles do men gather Grapes of Thorns 2. Admonition to all that have proof of this work of Gods special grace in them which Man nor Angel could not have wrought and which is given but to a few that they labor to shew forth their thankfulness by renouncing all evil and setting themselves on the contrary duties to please God 3. Comfort to them that do thus They may rejoyce in the assurance of their Regeneration they have cast off the work of darkness put on the armor of light 2. That there 's no perfection here to be attained for men cannot lay away that they have not but that they have even the best have remnants of the old man they have sin dwelling though not reigning in them they are sanctified throughout but not perfectly so that though it be true That he that is born of God sinneth not it s also That if we say we have no sin we deceive our selves and the truth is not in us God will have it so to humble us and exercise us in his Word Sacraments Prayer c. 1. This condemns all such monsters as challenge any perfection or purity here whereof have been sundry sorts raised up by Satan at all times as the Pelagians Catharists Caelestians Donatists Anabaptists Libertines Family of love c. a dangerous Opinion 1. To puff up with arrogancy while they look for inherent righteousness to come to heaven 2. To drive such into desperation that feel the corruptions of their hearts rebelling and cannot be rid of the same which yet was the case of Paul himself We are at the best unprofitable servants and while we live shall for many things stand in need to make this Petition Forgive us our trespasses 2. This must not yet quail or discourage us from this Spiritual combat but rather set us on work more carefully for though we cannot overcome in all yet we may prevail much and though we shall have cause to say with Paul O wretched man that I am c. yet we shall also have cause to say with him I thank God through Jesus Christ and though we shall have cause to grieve that we can get no more mastery yet we shall have cause to rejoyce that we have attained to that we have wherein though we have gone on but slowly yet sincerely Original sin is not a cistern if it were we would never leave till by the grace of God we had emptied it but it s a spring when we have pumped out all we can at night at a Fast at a Sacrament yet it will come in again quickly there will still be more whereat notwithstanding we must not be discouraged and give over but out with all again for the longer we tarry the fuller it will be therefore we are to set upon it both quickly and continually 3. That it s no easie thing to be a Christian it s no plain nor easie life or work but a very difficult sore and painful life for a man to renounce those sins which be so neer to him and he so wonderfully given to to deny himself and take up his cross therefore we are bid strive labor study give all diligence hereunto mortifie our earthly members pluck out our right eye cut off our right hand c. so many affections as be within us so many armed soldiers we have to fight against therefore is our life compared to a warfare as who are to fight against three sore Adversaries the Devil the World and our own Lusts the worst of all O how hard it is to resist the multitude and example of the vulgar and most how hard to despise the baits of unlawful Honors Profits Pleasures how hard to overcome the contrary troubles for well-doing how hard to resist the Devil but chiefly our own corrupt heart is a rebellious traytor subtile and wicked which few overcome and great is their reward which doovercome 1. They that finde themselves in an easie way are not in the state of grace It s easie to follow the course of the world and our own will but he that doth thus is in the broad way but to deny these and obey God we shall finde hard it will cost much labor many prayers sighs tears much hearing meditation partaking of the Sacrament and the like 2. For them that wrestle and finde themselves beset and therefore are fain to take pains let such be of good comfort this is the way to heaven be not discouraged go on the work is hard but the crown and reward is wonderful eternal 4. That under those corruptions here named all
souls for as they that be in health must eat oft so they that have spiritual health in soul must hear oft Therefore they that loath and are weary of the Word it s a sign of sick souls having no Stomack to this food it s a sign they are dead at the heart 2. For those that feel an appetite from Sermon to Sermon and to hear oft it s a sign they see their wants and finde the goodness of the Word 3. This may stop the mouth of barkers at such as go to the Word Why were you not at Church last Sunday must you go again to day must you go on the week day too Why know ye not that growing persons eat oft are often hungry They are growing and therefore that they may grow more must use this means they that see no wants in themselves a Sermon now and then will serve their turn 3. Unpartial As the childe cares not whom it sucks rich or poor so the milk be good so must we not look at the man or at his outward appearance so as he deliver the Word of God soundly truly and sincerely that it may appear good milk Many look upon pomp and outward complements so as they set light by the Ministery of them that want them counting them plain men simple men to see to let such know that not painting of the Cask makes good wine These being the duties of the people thus earnestly constantly and impartially to desire the Word of God by the way in a word Ministers must learn their duty and how to carry themselves 1. As the People be the Children so Ministers be the Nurses therefore they must be no dry Nurses then the people shall desire and miss but have full breasts that their Children may have enough to nourish them They must Study Read Meditate Pray that their breasts may be full as good House-holders they must have old and new for every bodies turn give every one their portion and as good Nurses that fear they shall want milk eat and drink spoon-meat more then they are willing so must we study against our ease to satisfie our spiritual Children not woo-meal our Children 2. Ministers as they must have milk enough so must they have love good store to lay out their breasts publiquely and privately upon all occasions as the kinde mother that sometimes a whole day together doth not pin up close her things but lets her breast always be in readiness 3. Ministers must have much patience that though the people some or all be wayward and take not the breast handsomly yea sometime fall out with the breast when it comes too fast and fall a crying as Children do They must I say have patience and wait putting it again in their mouthes though they cag and puke it up again Milk of the Word The Word is here and elswhere compared to milk as to wine and bread this being to the Soul as those to the body as in respect of the plainness of it to yong children which is therefore opposed to strong meat that is harder Points and Mysteries of Religion so especially for the nourishing nature thereof 1. Therefore they that may hear the Word and will not starve their own souls and are wilfully guilty of their own destruction They that take away the Word from any place pluck away the childrens bread and leave the people to perish for want of knowledge 2. Christians must desire it and hunger and thirst after it praying God to continue it and that of all punishments he would not send a famine of the Word The Soul hath a life as well as the Body bodily food will do it no good therefore the Word must be had 3. This also stops the mouthes of those that wonder at Christians because they hear oft they can never be content They did hear on the Sunday must they go on the week day too Did not you eat yesterday yet will dine to day again and no marvel for you cannot live without it no more can the Soul without the Word the Spiritual food thereof And though your Soul be a small feeder and little will content it indeed nothing at all because you have no Spiritual life in you yet the children of God that are alive must have it again and again We say They that are growing must eat oft and are hungry so must growing Christians hear oft It s also compared to milk for the sweetness of it nothing sweeter to a childe then the mothers breast so is the Word to a new born Christian. They that feel no sweetness therein their mouth is out of taste with sin as they also to whom it seems bitter contrarily they that finde it sweet pleasant delightsom yea every part thereof and to whom even the threatnings thereof are welcom as whereby their corruption may be subdued it s an infallible sign that they are Gods children Besides as milk is a general food for all Christians rich and poor so is the Word the common food of all Christians the means of their begetting and edifying the greatest must look for no other so neither the poorest none must neglect it it s the common food of all that shall be saved Happy is the Land therefore that flows with Peters milk and Davids honey they have the best Spiritual complexions that be fed therewith Sincere That is Pure Unmixt a borrowed speech from honey that is not mixt but sine cera without wax and it s so called not onely because its the purest thing in the world and therefore we o●ght to desire it the more earnestly but because there be such as will deal with the Word as Hucksters that sell milk and mingle it with water so some mix the Word with Errors and deliver it not sincerely whereof accordingly they were to take heed Hereof he had great cause to warn those Jews because there were false Teachers that labored to draw them from Christ altogether others joyned Law with Christ as if Salvation were not by Christ alone This was to put poison in the milk 1. This teacheth Ministers to preach the Word sincerely without mixture For matter all must be according to the Law and the Testimony and the Ballance of the Sanctuary so that they may boldly avouch thereof that Thus saith the Lord they must speak as the words of God and his Oracles And for maner it must not be carnal in humane eloquence and curious words of mans wisdom such teaching darkens the Word The Lord hath left us marvellous things in his Word and yet in a very plain maner He saith they be wonderful in one Verse and in the next That the entrance into them giveth wisdom and sheweth light So must Ministers deliver it in an holy kinde of plainness not mingling therewith carnal and fleshly eloquence
so glued to these things that they savor and minde no other life nor offer of any such thing A number of prophane people will not part with their sins though to obtain such a benefit And there be such a number of other Comes that calls and carry them away that though Christ call Come few follow him The Devil saith Come and they flock after him The World saith Come and they flock after it The flesh saith Come and they follow it thick and threefold even striving who shall follow it fastest But if they had wit to see whether these Comes tend they would not be so forward The Devil calls Come as the Fowler calleth the Bird into his Net The World calls Come and serves her followers as Dalilah did Sampson and Jael Sisera The flesh calls Come but all that follow it shall dye The Harlot also hath a Come but her Chambers go to Death and Hell and he that goeth in into her is led as an Ox to the slaughter the like might be instanced of others So that Christ by his Ministers might cry Come but few hear and follow O what woful unthankfulness is this Did Christ come down from Heaven to us and will not we come to him one whit Hath he taken so long a journey and come to offer himself and do we refuse O horrible ingratitude Yea what mischief is this to our selves Is it not to seek our own destruction If a King should send a gracious Pardon to a company of Traytors that had deserved Death and they should go on and set light by it would he not send an Host of armed Soldiers to destroy them So may the Lord justly deal with us You are told you are undone without Christ that he can and will save you if you come to him if you will not you cannot but perish and whom then will you blame O whose heart should not leap at such an offer and coming in yield himself and say O it s the first bargain I 'le make the best that ever I shall make How many thousands would be glad to hear such things as these that do not nor are vouchsafed the favor Do you think ever to have a better offer to make any better of your sins then to renounce them and embrace Christ O consider of this and renounce all other Comes which you have already followed and at last ere it be too late embrace this most blessed offer O fall down and humble thy self O but will he ever pardon and receive me who have been thus and thus It s no matter what thou hast been not number nor greatness of sins can let if thy heart could be truly humbled there 's the greatest doubt He as the true Samaritan will pour wine and oyl in thy wounds He is the true pool of Bethesda now the water is stirred step in and though thou hast been Thirty and eight years yea Forty eight and more sick of deadly sin thou shalt be cured Christ is a perfect Physitian what disease is there that he cannot cure The Urinals that stand so abundantly in Physitians and Apothecaries houses may condemn the world seeing there be so few seek to the spiritual Physitian labor to see thy misery understand and apply the Law to make the soul sick as some make themselves sea-sick When thou art touch't deeply with thy misery come to Christ he will do thee good If being burthened with thy sins thou goest to the Devil for councel he will tell thee thy ●ins be unpardonable no mercy better rid thy self out of the way as Judas If thou go to the world they will bid thee be merry and put away these melancholly dumps and thoughts Ride abroad go to Cards Dice haunt Ale-houses c. and go to no more of these Preachers and Sermons they put folks out of their wits that 's the good they do People that were honest folks and lived at quiet since they have used to go after them are grown full of fancies But if you come to Christ he will take pity on you ease comfort and save you O be perswaded will you perish rather then humble your selves will you cast away your souls for love of your lusts We will hereafter for we know that else there is no Salvation O that 's the Devils word Hereafter he knows delays to be dangerous Accept it whilst it is offered lest thou never come to it again If thou despise it thou shalt hear a fearful Go ye cursed If thou wilt embrace it thou shalt hear a comfortable Come ye blessed The Lord perswade your hearts and cause many to come this day if it be his blessed will As unto a living stone The next priviledge of a Christian by Christ is that being come to him he conveyeth of that spiritual Life and Grace that is in himself into every of them which is here set down under the similitude of a building of which there be two parts 1. The Foundation 2. The rest of the House raised and built thereupon which be so coupled as they make but one building For the Foundation which is Christ Jesus he is compared to a stone because as that 's used for a foundation in an house of moment as being sure lasting firm and perpetual So is Christ Jesus the Foundation that bears up his Church and by which it is saved a sure firm and perpetual Foundation without whom there is no hope of Salvation he being the way the truth and the life He that brings another Gospel let him be accursed If he come like an Angel spit on his face defie him to Hell Adam and all since have been saved by him and all that are or ever shall be what he did no other could do and that he did which was needful for our Salvation 1. This condemns all that build not upon this Foundation but on another either in whole or in part as 1. The Jews that look for a Savior in the Ayr that will come they know not when 2. The Turks that build on a deceitful cursed Mahomet that will never come till he be hailed before the Judgement-Seat of Christ for his Blasphemies 3. The Papists who though they acknowledge Christ in word to be the Redeemer and Savior of the World yet they so pull from him and adde to him as they leave him but a bare Name and Title for then is Christ the Foundation and so acknowledged when we acknowledge Wisdom Righteousness Sanctification Redemption Satisfaction Life and Glory to be in him and in him alone Contrarily they attribute part of these to their own Merits Masses Pardons Satisfactions and so they rake together a deal of Rubbish to joyn with the Foundation which will not be for he is an whole Foundation or none of them some few whose eyes God opens in their end as finding no certainty nor sure rest in any thing of their own do renounce themselves and all
in them and onely lean upon Christ Jesus for Salvation and so become happy indeed They also hold that Peter is the head of the Church and Foundation thereof who would not wonder at their wickedness when as Peter himself saith it here of Christ and attributes nothing to himself But is it not confirmed by that of our Savior Thou art Peter and upon this Rock I will build my Church The Question propounded by our Savior was moved to all the rest as well as Peter and answered of all though by the mouth of Peter Christs meaning is That on himself whom he had confessed he would build his Church Would he build it on Peter then either on his Person or on his Faith not on his Person and how weak was his Faith which was so sore shaken by the speech of a Maid that could be no meat foundation to build on 4. Those fools among our selves who though they acknowledge no other foundation yet build not upon him but on their civil life their bare hearing of the Word which yet they do because it s commanded by Law and stands most with their safety and as the Papists but for their purse so they would not come to Church but for shame or punishment their doing as others do c. foolish Builders that build on the sand their house as every other that is not built on Christ by true Faith how fair soever in their own eyes will fall on their heads if any storm of trouble arise for the Gospel they will quckly yield and change as oft as Religion changeth and if no such change be yet at death they shall drop into Hell for want of a foundation as the five foolish Virgins were shut out of Heaven for that they had no oyl for their Lamps no stock of Faith to feed or back their outward Profession They that content themselves with any thing with any gift before they have got a true justifying Faith will fall away will perish may prove Persecutors or any thing They that so hear the Word as they never give over till it hath humbled them and brought them to Christ and they have found sure foundation on him and footing and grace to be changed these build upon the rock Therefore content not your selves with hearing the Word nay hearing it with joy and reforming many things nay that you have been troubled for your sins as some have wept for their sins at a Sermon but let it go over and wear away ere they came at Christ so bearing your selves in hand that ye are converted persons for afterward by your falling away or at your death it will prove nothing so and all for want of a foundation There be even now thousands in hell that have heard as many Sermons as ever you heard or ever shall 2. That Christ is a foundation and the onely foundation of his Church is no small comfort to all that believe on him They may quiet themselves amidst the multitude of contrary Opinions in the world or temptations of Satan to make them waver they may answer If Christ be not sufficient to save me I am content to be damned I 'le never seek other foundation you may well enough Again being built on Christ there be many enemies will lay Battery against you to beat you off but be of good comfort they may shake you indeed but to overcome you or pull you off the foundation it s not possible All the gates of Hell shall not prevail against you all their power shall not quail you As in a City the strength is placed at the gates as the Port-cullis and the Canon to keep from entrance so if Hell should plant all its force against a Christian yea the poorest Christian it shall never be able to prevail against him he is so surely joyned to the foundation by the Spirit of God that lies so fast Will Christ suffer his Building to be defaced or one member or the least joynt to be pulled out of his body Christ that prayed that his Disciples might be kept prayed also for all that should believe Living Christ is a living foundation not onely because he hath life in himself as he is the Living Bread the Truth and the Life but because he giveth life to others even all that believe in him Hence percieve 1. That Christ differs from all other foundations he gives life to his but whoso trusteth on any other shall dye eternally 2. An encouragement for all to come to Christ He is not such a one as can do them no pleasure but as he can and will save them so he will also put life into them that whereas before they were as dead as a stock to any thing concerning the glory of God or their own good no Wit Will Memory Affection no Hand Foot Tongue but all were stiff and stark lame to any good yea dead being joyned to him he will make them alive give them Wit Will and a Heart to that which is good so a Hand Foot and Tongue yea so change them that they shall be nothing the same but new Creatures Hence it is that some that were as very wretches as could be to their lusts that loved a Sermon Sabbath or good Exercise as a Bear doth the stake have yet by the preaching of the Word been brought to Christ the case is so altered with them that now they loath what they loved love what they loathed It is not a strange thing to see a man that loved money as his life and had no savor in any good to set as light by it as his shoes and to love the word that wrought this dislike in him So for a man that loved a pair of Cards and Tables and to ramble abroad on the Lords Day and who could not abide to take a book in his hand or to be in any Religious persons company now to abandon the one and to be earnestly affected with the other yet this Christ worketh in those that be joyned to him O come to this Christ Jesus humble thy self believe in him and give over thy self to him and though thou beest as bad as the worst he will so alter thee as thou mayest prove a worthy Christian. 3. This serves to uncase a number of Hypocrites that think themselves stones of this Building and hope to be saved by Christ and to be Believers and yet have no Spiritual life in them If you can shew me that Spiritual life that you have got from Christ to dye to sin and live to righteousness then you say something but there be no dead stones in this Building but living answerable to the foundation Therefore they that remain dead in their sins and old lusts or any of them Christ and they are assuredly as yet two and not one Shew your Christianity by renouncing all ill and by your love to good Prayer good duties in your Families and
must settle 3. It teacheth us to search the Scripture laboring by all means that the Word of Christ may dwell in us plentifully that so we may be grounded If we hear God speaking in his Word we must sit down by it all mouthes must be stopt if not we must not be carried without it Again He alleageth the Old Testament as Christ and the other Apostles did for the Old was the same in substance with the New and of the same Authority Further In that he nameth not the place nor the Prophet it sheweth their skill and rebuketh our ignorance that have not the book of God clasped against us as in Popery but open if we can take our time for the place it self it s alleaged with some alteration of the words though not of the sence 1. He leaves out a word or two and takes that which fitteth his purpose 2. He turneth these words of the Prophet He that believeth shall not make haste into these He that believeth on him shall not be confounded The Prophet sets down the effect the Apostle the cause for unbelievers being ashamed it makes them run up and down in their misery for some other help seeing themselves disappointed and deceived The occasion of that promise there was to comfort the good in respect of the great threatnings against the bad and contemners namely that they should not be destroyed and cast off among the rest and that the wicked might not scorn them and think all Gods promises made to them fallen to the ground Behold This being a word to stir up attention implieth that What the Lord saith he doth He is true of his word the Almighty and who cannot be hindred He saith not Such a stone shall be laid but Behold I lay it whereby he confirms the good and puts them out of doubt who by reason of the threatnings were grown weak fearful and in doubt Here see our infidelity in Spiritual things especially if we see any things against us such was Zacharias So was not Abraham he looked not to carnal lets but rested on Gods Word had enough that God spake it so should we If we have any promise of Gods mouth we should be of good comfort and believe and not be dismaid at our sins and unworthiness Come unto me saith our Savior all ye that are weary and laden and I will refresh you c. What promise more comfortable and yet many seeing their sins and danger cannot be comforted and perswaded But we must give God the glory to believe him on his word and know that nothing can make him break promise or change his minde either any hinder him from performing what he hath promised I lay It s God that layes the Foundation of his Churches Salvation All the Men and Angels in the world cannot lay one stone in this building unto this Foundation Though God use the Ministery of his servants Men to this purpose yet its God that by his Spirit makes them fit and couples them hereto therefore much less could they lay this corner stone Paul saith he laid this Foundation By Preaching the same to the people not otherwise That Foundation which God had laid before the world and appointed to be Preached that he taught to the people and that was all he did If God gave Christ generally for his Church then for every humble soul that seeth his need of Christ and cometh with an heavy heart to him and desires him above all the world assuredly he will give him to such In Sion That hill in Jerusalem is put for the Church whereof it was a type and because the Gospel was first preached there Christ there revealed and from thence conveyed into all nations far and wide so that now by Gods mercy we have him no less preached unto us then the Jews had and have also our part in him as largely O unspeakable mercy A chief corner stone A chief stone a foundation stone This is the principal point in this first part of the Verse but of this on the fourth Verse where was shewed That he is not a stone as others be in the building but the foundation on which they are all built which sustains and holds them together there being no other foundation but he This the Papists overturn and that both in respect of his Kingly Prophetical and Priestly Office For his Kingly Office which is to rule over the consciences of his subjects by his Spirit and to have power to make Laws to binde their consciences they take it from him for with them the Pope may also make Laws of his to binde the conscience as much as any of Christs and doth and may repeal some of his at his pleasure For his Prophetical Office which is to be the onely Teacher of his Church and to reveal all his Fathers minde in the Books of the Prophets and Apostles this they take away by adding as if the Word were altogether imperfect unwritten Verities and mens Traditions which say they are of absolute necessity to be obeyed to Salvation For his Priestly they abolish both parts of it 1. His Sacrifice All sufficient and once offered on the Cross for all by their blasphemous Mass wherein they offer Christ daily as they say as a Propitiatory Sacrifice for the sins of the quick and the dead 2. His Intercession wherein they joyn many Saints with him What Salvation can there be for such le ts pray for and keep our selves far from them Elect Christ is chosen of God to the work of our Redemption and furnished for it therefore make we choyce of him for our portion wo to them that refuse him He that believeth on him shall not be confounded Hereby is meant a true particular justifying Faith Such as have this shall not be ashamed or seek at any time as confounded or deceived of sufficient help and Salvation therefore he shall never be put to make haste to seek any other The true Believer shall never be confounded but finde enough in Christ to satisfie him to the full to deliver him from all evil and make him partaker of all Happiness Wisdom Righteousness Sanctification and Redemption and enough to make his minde peaceable and quiet and to stablish him against all that his own conscience or any yea the Devil himself can lay to his charge but he findes enough to answer all at large As Thou art a sinner and hast deserved Damnation and God is just R. I grant all but I have a surety able enough who hath born all Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect It s God that justifieth c. His heart is fixed he believeth in the Lord In his life he hath that wherein he may quiet himself and never be to seek but may draw new life and grace from Christ to enable him to
They say as the Olive and Fig Tree in Jothams Parable Shall I leave my Fatness Shall I forsake my Sweetness Usury Deceit Lying Fornication Adultery and the like so must not we we must be doers of the Word All other duties do but tend to practise which is the end and perfection of all 1. God is our Soveraign Lord and King and we be his Subjects and these his Laws and by these means doth he speak to us gives every body leave to read his Laws and Statutes yea requires it and besides sets Expounders thereof This is the Word of GOD This is the minde of GOD He that despiseth this despiseth GOD himself This Bible shall save or condemn the World and by this we shall all be judged He being our Soveraign and we such poor Worms we should count it our happiness to obey 2. He is exceeding bountiful towards us he who both gave us life and continues to maintain it by so many mercies which all ought to binde us neither doth he thus for us to strenghthen us to rebel and fight against him but to the contrary 3. His will is a perfect rule of Righteousness and he doth not first see a thing good and then wills it and commands it but first commands it and wills it and so it becomes good Whatsoever is agreeable to this is holy and good whatsoever is contrary to this is wicked and to be abandoned 4. All creatures in heaven and earth obey The Sun runs his course ordinarily that God set it at first and slacketh not and not so onely but if it be put out of course it resisteth not If he bid it stand still it doth if he bid it come back it doth He appoints the Sea to flow and it doth but if he bid it stand up and let his people pass it obeyeth and stands as two Brazen Walls so when he sets it on work it rageth to toss Jonah and whom God will and when he bids it and the winds be still they obey as to our Savior He commanded the east wind to bring in the Locusts and another wind to carry them out how much more then should we obey that ought to be best of all being Lords of the rest and all they to serve us Summer and Winter obey the Lords Word and why not we These may rise up against us 5. Obedience exceedingly pleaseth all else is to no purpose Sacrifices burning of Incense observation of Feasts or Fasts c. Unto the wicked saith God What hast thou to do to declare my Statutes or that thou shouldest take my Covenant in thy mouth seeing thou hatest instruction and casteth my words behinde thee Nay it s so far from pleasing him as it incenseth and provoketh him He that turns away his ear from the cry of the poor shall himself cry unto the Lord but not be heard They are blessed that hear the Word and keep it If ye know these things saith our Savior happy are ye if ye do them yea such as do the will of God he accounts as his Mother Brethren and Sisters by this we may know that we are the Lords This also opens the storehouses of all Gods blessings and musles the mouthes of all the Creatures that they can do us no hurt 6. Disobedience is that which hath ever troubled the world At first in Adam and Eve it put all out of course and so hath done ever since This is the cause of all Evils Plague Pestilence Famine and the like yea of the increase and continuance of those and others more grievous yea this is that which brought all Judgements not onely upon Israel but upon all the world and that which sends men to eternal confusion 1. This is an exceeding comfort to all those whose hearts the Lord hath inclined bowed and humbled to be obedient to his will in all things and that have no greater grief then that they can obey no better but glad when they can obey and most when best let these know it s a brand of Christs sheep and mark that they love God that they are of the blessed ones that hearing also obey that they shall never fall as being built on the rock This is a certain band to tye the Lord to you he can fail you of no good thing Obey my voyce saith he and I will be your God yea and a certain assurance of eternal life is gained by obeying Herein continue and encrease your care its perfect freedom it brings sound and true comfort here and hereafter when they that disobey have a corrasive and gnawing Conscience 2. This condemns all sorts of disobedient persons which are many and this is the reason that Hell is fuller then Heaven because so many are disobedient to the Word and so few will be held within compass as 1. Those notorious monsters that live in open prophaneness that are set to cross God what he commands they will none of it and what he forbids they are mad on which shake off all care and live as they list as if they were masterless and no body had to do with them or to call them to any account as if they ought no duty to any who will not learn Gods ways but with Pharaoh say Who is the Lord c. Do these poor woful creatures know what they do alas no Knowest thou with whom thou hast to do and against whom thou rebellest against the Lord of Heaven and earth that made the world that toucheth the mountains and they smoke that thundereth with his voyce But who art thou that strivest with thy maker that darest rebel against thy Soveraign who is able to cast thee into the Jail of Hell for ever and ever O consider this you that forget God The wicked shall be turned into Hell upon the wicked God will rain snares and fire c. Dost thou think to speed better then thy Predecessors Adam was cast out of Paradise the old world drowned Sodom burnt c. If Pharaoh that proud hearted Tyrant could not hold it out nor Nebuchadnezzar nor Belshazzar nor Herod dost thou think to get any thing by wrestling with thy maker by casting out thy gantler and as it were bidding battel to the Lord O therefore humble thy self on thy face fall flat at his footstool and crave pardon send out messengers of Peace and submit thy self saying Lord what wilt thou that I shall do obey and that gladly or else he will lay thee where thou shalt have small joy yea he will make thee obey in spight of thine heart There will come a voyce that thou shalt nor resist Go ye cursed of my Father and if thou wouldst bring thy minde to obey thou shouldst finde it every way thy safest course thou shouldest save not onely thy soul which is the greatest but even thy body thy good name
thy goods for how have many by yielding to the Word saved hundreds and thousands this way that they began to waste and others do How do many bring untimely death upon themselves by wretched courses How many do the gallows catch in a year how many stab'd and dye fearfully which might have lived long if they would have been ruled Innumerable sorrows do men bring upon themselves for want of obedience to God and his Word which that would save them from At least if thou wilt not obey throughly and in all things yet come into some civil order and course so shalt thou at least if thou beest not saved yet have the less torment in Hell 2. Civil persons which disobey both commandments of the Gospel do neither believe nor repent and for the Law they do some duties to men but of the first Table make small Conscience nay they have no skill neither savor of the spiritual maner of performing duties What talk they of giving every man his due when they give God no part of his as they should or of keeping promise with men if they shall break their vow with God 3. Ignorant persons of all kindes as the Heathens that worship they know not what and Papists that toil themselves about their will-worship how good soever their meaning may be yet they do not that which God commands yea numbers among ourselves that either have or might have the means but neglecting them pull in their heads 4. Hypocrites that obey in some things yea some in many and go far yet either never digged deep and laid a foundation sure or retain the love of some sin 3. This may be for instruction to us all especially that profess the fear of God that throughout our whole course and in all our conversation we cast this with our selves not what our profit or our pleasure or our minde saith but what the Word of God saith This becometh Christians and will bring comfort and will prove the surest way at long run we must not following our own reason and conceits cast off and disobey the Word we think it may be better thus and thus or hope it s no great matter or that it s but once O take heed This cost Saul dear He would go offer Sacrifice He said he was bold so he was indeed as we many times But take heed of being bold with the Word and taking leave of sin though but for once Thou knowest not what that once may cost thee To Travel on the Lords day hath many fair pretences but what evils hath ensued thereby So Usury is a hasty way to get gain but fair and soft goes far What if we get much and put it in a bottomless purse and God blow on it and melt it One man gets slowly in his Office and Trade because he dares not lye Dissemble break the Sabbath Others care for nothing and they grow rich apace with the one it holds and his Children enjoy it and he dyeth with Peace and Credit but the other dyeth with disgrace and a guilty Conscience and God scatters that he hath for God will take pity of the honest labors of men and give of the fruit thereof to their Posterity but no pity of that which was got with the price of his glory Hereby many a man loseth soul and all So many a man seeth not into some one thing who is otherwise good and so haply is too hard to his workfolks will make bold now and then with the Sabbath c. though his soul be faved yet God sets the print of his hand on him in some outward affliction Body Goods Children and the like Whereunto also they were appointed The Reason how it comes about that seeing Christ is the way of Salvation and the Word the means to bring men to Faith in Christ that yet to some they prove a rock of offence and turn to their destruction it s because God in his unchangeable and eternal purpose hath so decreed This to let pass other interpretations by the consent of the soundest is the plain meaning of the words and I come not to tell you what men say but what I am perswaded God saith As he hath ordained some to Salvation so hath he some to stumble and come to destruction which are the two parts of Predestination This is that most holy and just decree of God whereby he hath in himself eternally and unchangeably determined of the final estate of all mankinde and every particular in the same whatsoever falls out is by his decree and not a● adventure He doth all according to the counsel of his own will The means of effecting this are the creation of man in innocency and the fall of Adam which was also of him decreed It hath these two parts Election and Reprobation for though it be put sometimes for the one onely as for Election yet is it common to both This Doctrine will appear both lawful and meet to be taught upon these grounds 1. Whatsoever is written is written for our learning and the whole Scripture is profitable to teach c. whereof this is a part 2. This is a part of Gods counsel the whole whereof ought to be taught 3. It s of very great use to the people of God their strong Bulwark to flie unto and strengthen them against all Satans assaults even the unchangeableness of Gods counsel 4. The holy Apostles have Preached the same plainly to mixt Churches in most of their Epistles 5. Many Errors have been broached about this Doctrine by Satan and men of corrupt judgement whereof the Translator of Mr. Perkins his Treatise speaketh in his Epistle But it s offensive and many take hurt hereby casting off all care and saying If I be elect I shall be saved let me do as I list and if I be appointed to damnation I cannot be saved do what I can What if some take hurt by this Doctrine shall it not therefore be Preached What Doctrine almost can be taught but mans vile nature and heart will take occasion by it of ill as of Gods mercy whereupon men wax bold and secure shall not the Doctrine of Gods mercy be taught so of Christian liberty which was the reason of those preventions which the Apostles used so of the Doctrine of Justification by Faith onely yea Christ himself is a stumbling stone and rock of offence Shall he therefore not be Preached It s not the fault of the Doctrine but their own wicked corruption and Satans malice that turn holy and wholesom things to hurt as a cholerick stomack doth good meat into ill juyce and the Spiders gather poyson from the same flowers from which the Bees gather honey Do we therefore wish there were no flowers Shall the Childrens bread be kept from them because some unruly Servants will riot and abuse it Shall the use of a Knife or a Sword
ordained most men to destruction then is his justice greater then his mercy We must not measure his justice and mercy by the number of the one or of the other for if there had been but one onely saved it had been as great mercy as his justice in condemning the rest for if but one had been saved it must have cost the death of the Lord Jesus such was our misery Now what a mercy it was that the eternal Son of God equal with the Father and in whom he was well pleased should not onely abase himself to our nature but to our infirmities yea to sorrows and great indignities nay to death yea a cursed death O who can express this love It was a wonder he did not rather suffer us all to perish then his Son to endure the least of these Then he hath ordained the means of their condemnation namely sin and so is the Author of sin True he ordained and decreed that there should be sin in the world as he did of the fall of Adam but not as is sin and evil but as whereby and out of which God draws glory to himself and it was necessary that there should he evil in the world as well as good that a way might be made for setting out Gods mercy in pardoning some and his justice in punishing it in others but so as the Lord is no way faulty He ordained willingly to permit it as it hath respect of good in it but as no actor of it He put no evil in Adam nor any man but onely willingly permitted his fall c. 2. This should and may stay our mindes when we see any great Professors and men of excellent parts fall away It s no other then that an Hypocrite and one that never was sound nor elect of God is now discovered and let none that can prove their election be overmuch troubled onely walk reverently but never be dismaid with deadly fear They fell because they were not elect and you being elect shall be therefore sure to stand and thus our Savior comforts his Disciples That none was lost but Judas who was the son of perdition so did Paul the Christians notwithstanding the revolting of Hymeneus Philetus Alexander c. If it were not for this what a deadly fear might this breed in weak Christians to see those so far their superiors in knowledge and gifts to fall away Thus of the first The second is this That This was of his own will and for no cause out of himself for the Lord infinite in wisdom and holiness needs not as man to fetch the reason of his purposes forth of himself He will have mercy on whom he will have mercy and whom he will he hardneth He doth all things according to the counsel of his own will Is it not said O Israel thy destruction is of thy self and He that beliveth not is condemned and Except ye repent ye shall all likewise perish Cursed be the mouth that saith not so even that every mans destruction is of himself and his own just desert but we must put a difference between the decree of God and the execution of it God condemneth no man upon his bare will but his own just desert Sin comes in between the decree of God and the execution of his Decree as the cause of Damnation If then it be asked Why is any man condemned For his sin But why did God decree to condemn any Because he would As no man is saved but by Faith in Christ and Sanctification of life which yet is not the cause why God appointed him to Salvation but because he would so there 's none condemned but for his sin yet God ordained him not thereto because of sin but because of his own will If any ask further and why would he That a note too high for man or angel to sing but there in humility we must rest and not put the Lord to render a reason of all his decrees or doings which even princes will not do to their subjects he raised up Pharaoh c. even because he would get glory out of him and by his means This condemneth the Opinion of foreseen works good or bad as of this because he foresaw some would be bad and refuse grace he therefore Reprobated them c. but God loved Jacob and hated Esau not onely before the had done good or evil but before there was any thinking of good or ill If foreseen sin be the cause of Reprobation then on the contrary foreseen grace of Election but the Epistle to the Ephesians sheweth the contrary hereof Faith and Sanctification followeth upon Election as fruits thereof therefore go not before as any causes so do Infidelity and impenitency follow after Reprobation If foreseen sin had been the cause of Reprobation then we should all have been refused for he could not see us but all sinners But as the blinde man was not so born for his own or Parents sin but that the work of God in curing him by a Word might be seen so was it in this business Thus of the second The third is this That The Lord hath done this most justly His will is a rule of Righteousness and he can do nothing but most holily and justly Is there unrighteousness with God God forbid Though we cannot see into the justness of it yet we ought to acknowledge it The Sun may shine and that brightly too though a blinde man see it not Man was made holy and having free-will by his willing sin lost his state and still sins willingly It seems cruelty in the Lord to appoint most part of mankinde to Destruction He did it not as ayming at their Damnation but at his own glory which is more to be regarded then all the World And shall the Clay say against the Potter Why hast thou made me thus and thus may not he do as he list So may not the Lord get glory by his own creatures which way he will And do men for their pleasure hunt the Hare and Partridge or kill not onely Flyes and baser creatures but also Fowls with their grins in like maner appointing Sheep Oxen c. for the slaughter and shall not the Lord have as much Soveraignty over men the work of his hands we cannot make a Fly or Flea yea it s more reason that the Lord should be glorified if he would with the Damnation of all mankinde then that the killing of a Hare nay a Fly should serve to the honor or pleasure of the greatest Potentate of the world What if he had ordained none to Salvation who had had cause to complain Besides with what patience bears he with them and their blaspheming of him every day What marvellous benefits and comfortable good things bestows he upon them houses lands wealth health peace who might destroy and send them to
c. on the contrary consider the woful estate of the wicked For what be they be they Kings Priests or Prophets no such matter Believers be so They be Kings Priests and Prophets but the wicked are the slaves of sin and Satan slaves to the flesh to their own lusts to the world What though they be rich yea though they be Emperors and not Believers they are the vassels of Satan and have nothing but their drudgery in sin and Hell for their own place as their desert Neither are they Priests but prophane ones let them stand off for the holy God cannot abide unholy persons they and their Sacrifice are abomination to the Lord They offer no Sacrifices at all of Prayer Praise or Alms or if they do its abominable because they offer not themselves soul and body to God first but they offer themselves to the Devil and him they serve with body and soul might and main Neither are they Prophets but dumb beasts not savoring of the mysteries of Gods Kingdom or if uttering any thing thereof yet their ill lives disgrace it again O that such considering their own base and the others happy estate would have an holy emulation to be as they and indeed nothing in this world is worthy to be envied but a Christian Humble therefore thy self for thy sin past turn to God for thy pardon in Christ and labor to have thy part in him and by him and by Faith in him thou shalt attain to be a Christian and so consequently a King Priest and Prophet and be enabled to the duties of the same An holy nation Here 's a third priviledge not meant of all the Jews but of the elect among them and of all believing Gentiles as Acts 2. 38 39. so called 1. Because they had the Oracles of God the Word and Sacraments which no other had This belonged to all the Jews True but it might be said that they onely had them which had the power of them to the conversion of their souls and Salvation and others had them not which had no fruit and benefit by them 2. Because they were sanctified and set aside by special grace to be holy ones to the Lords use Note then That All that be the Lords are holy persons that is Not onely having Christs holiness imputed to them but in whom God worketh inherent Righteousness and Holiness by his Spirit conveying vertue from Christs death to kill sin and from his Resurrection to raise them to newness of life to alter and change them throughout in soul spirit and body This though not perfect in any yet is sound and upright in them all therefore he gives them his holy Word and holy Spirit to work this and holy Sacraments to encrease it and its requisite that as God is holy so also all his should so be and these be they shall see his face with comfort no other and for these onely is Heaven prepared O let every man examine himself whether he be a sanctified person or not if yea Then 1. To thy comfort know hereby thou art one of the Lords number a greater priviledge then to be written among the Potentates of the earth There 's Consolation to thee thou wert elected and shalt be glorified 2. Seeing thou art set aside for the Lords use and sanctified in body and soul never defile thy self again or put any part of thy body and soul to any common or unholy use of sin or Satan In the Law it was ever most fearful to take any Consecrated thing as the Holy Oyl Shew-bread or Vessels and put them to any common use so is it that we should put Hand Foot or Tongue to any use of sin or corruption for any part of our souls or lives Oh many contrarily can let loose their tongue to impatient proud and most unseemly speeches yea and their bodies and mindes some to excessive following the world as they were wont and as worldlings do and some after their pleasures and vanities O that we would grow and abound in Sanctification that here having our fruit in holiness we may have the end everlasting life If not but contrarily you either live in prophaneness the open breach of some of the Commandments or be only superstitiously holy in some odde devotions and loose in other things as Papists and a number of old Folks or such as have a counterfeit holiness in the first Table and make no conscience of the duties of the second or contrarily civil persons that seem very just in the second Table but savor nothing of the duties of the first Table Know you are yet unsanctified persons and therefore out of Gods number you may be members of the visible Church where good and bad chaff and corn are but not of the invisible who onely are sanctified ones Let such be what they will be having Wit Learning Wealth Wisdom Civility all skill of Languages yea if they could measure the Heavens number the Stars c. and be not sanctified they are of the Devils rabble and shall perish everlastingly O that you would awake out of your courses What fruit have ye had or look ye to have therein The end of these things is death Come to the Word crave the Holy Spirit desire Pardon and Sanctification till this be you are not out of the state of Damnation and all things are impure to you Word Sacraments yea your Meat Drink Apparel c. A peculiar people That is a people proper to the Lord which he himself hath purchased and which he now takes as his own and sets great store by called therefore his secret ones whom he keeps under his protection to whom also he reveals his secrets his Beloved ones his Spouse his Love his undefiled as the Apple of his eye the Signet on his right hand whom he cannot forget In the flood he saved his Church when all others were drowned he saved Lot when Sodom was destroyed he makes more account of one Christian then of thousands of others If one of them pray it s so forcible that he says Let me alone and if thousands of wicked it s but as the howling of Dogs an abomination They are his glory all the world are dross to them vile persons and base The wicked though never so many are but servants to the Church as the seven Nations were to make the Land of Canaan fit for the people of God yea even then when they seem to dominier most over them they are but their drudges They as a wisp scour the Church to make it bright in the eyes of God but the wisp is to be cast into the fire they are Gods rod to bring it to obedience when that 's effected the rod is to be flung into the fire And No marvel though the Lord set such store by his Church seeing he hath been at such cost therewith as
to Redeem it with the blood of his Son and to give his Spirit thereto to graft and unite it to Christ and to sanctifie and make it like himself How dear are our children to us God hath made us sons nay heirs the Lands we purchase be dear to us we are Gods purchase our members be dear to us God hath made us members of his Son 1. Oh if we be so peculiar and choyce to the Lord how choycely should we walk how should we set as great store by the Lord and his Commandments as he hath done by us He hath chosen us for his inheritance we should chuse him for our portion and make him so and his Word our Heritage as David did O how warily should we walk Every Christians ought to be one of a thousand the least as David and the greatest of the Angel as God we should shine so among others as Moses his face shone when he came down from the Lord that we may straight be discerned by our conversation who and what we are O how doth this tax the coldness and carelesness of many Christians in whom who can view any singular thing but we ought to be singular persons They omit duties in their Families or slubber them over as many Hypocrites who can upon any occasion be as froward impatient worldly as any other Is it not requisite that such as the Lord hath been at such cost with as to Elect them Redeem them call them by his Word and Spirit Sanctifie them c. should be extraordinary persons we should be much in those duties that the World and Hypocrites do not meddle with as private Prayer Examination Watchfulness yea against secret corruption and in those we do we must perform them after another fashion then heretofore 2. This is a comfort that God makes such special reckoning of his therefore though we have many and mighty Enemies yet we need not fear God is on our side he is about us as the Mountains about Jerusalem they must dig down God ere they can come at his overcome God ere they can conquer his 3. Terror to the wicked How dare they meddle to hurt or persecute any of these little ones lest their Angel be let loose to destroy them If Meroz were cursed for not helping them what shall they be that harm them They that rail on them mock and misuse them would do further if opportunity served 4. The wicked are of no reckoning with God for they be like the Devil and do nothing but sin against God and are his Enemies The wicked are as chaff and darnel the godly as wheat the good as the fish in the net the wicked as weeds and frogs the good as the vine the bad as the nettles and brambles the good as the tree planted by the rivers of waters c. the wicked as barren nay hurtful trees the godly be like good ground the wicked like that which bears thorns and bryars This should make them see their base condition and set less by themselves seeing God sets nothing by them and joyn themselves to the Lords people and labor to be such That ye should shew forth the praises of him c. The end of all these priviledges and this cost is that we might shew forth by word and deed all the vertues of God his Mercy Patience Wisdom Goodness c. shewed in our Election Redemption Vocation Sanctification c. Where note 1. That God hath not bestowed this cost on us in vain but that we might both sound out his praises with our mouthes and throughout out whole life shew forth the same O how infinitely stand we indebted to him But where is our zeal any thing answerable to the least of these unspeakable mercies vouchsafed unto us 2. That he did not Elect us because he foresaw we would shew forth his vertues but that we might so do If he had foreseen any works in us we might then have shewed forth our own Merits as his Vertues but that 's contrary to this Text and the whole course of Scripture Therefore we may say herein Not unto us but unto thy name give the glory 3. That he Elected us not to be idle but to shew forth his Vertues and this confuteth the Opinion of those that hold the Doctrine of Election and the unchangeableness thereof to be a Doctrine of Liberty and a gap to all licentiousness But he chose us that we should be holy and that not in shew to please men but before him even so as he requireth and accepteth 4. That the furthest end of our Election is Gods glory not our Salvation True he propounded that too but not as the furthest end So he ordained some to Damnation not that simply he takes pleasure in their destruction but to set forth his glory even the glory of his power and justice in their just condemnation so would he be glorified in his mercy in the Salvation of the Elect. Hence learn we To make the glory of God the end of all our actions and nothing else not profit not pleasure not preferment no not the Salvation of our own souls we must not Hear Meditate Pray keep the Sabbath flie from Sin do good to save our Souls for then we seek our selves but that God may be glorified the other must be minded in the second place Who hath called you He describeth God by a special benefit bestowed upon them namely their effectual calling from sin to grace and this he doth to confirm them in their Election whereof he had spoken before by which they might prove the same Note then that effectual calling is a certain argument of our Election I say effectual calling because there is 1. An outward calling common to the Reprobate as many are called but few are chosen and 2. An inward and effectual calling when the Spirit goes with the outward means and boars through the ear of the heart and opens the eyes and breaks through all lets and enlightens and changes a man admirably who before was not at all moved when he heard the very same things when God deals with the Reprobate he calls them outwardly but when with his Elect he goeth to work with his Spirit which passeth the power of Man or Angels the work is the Lords The outward instrument of effectual calling is principally the Ministery of the Word other things may prepare as the fire heats the iron but the hammer fashioneth it as affections the good conversation of others and the like Thus the Jailor was by an Earthquake some are gastered and first smitten yet rarely by some fear in the night or at some other time fearful thoughts lay hold on them But this is not conversion it s no other then may be in a Reprobate after they are brought by counsel to the Word
work will we be angry with him The Lord is much more equal and wise Now to discern these foul temptations from those which do arise from our own nature these notes may be observed 1. That they come suddenly 2. Violently being even forced into us 3. By their multitude being as thick as hailstones 4. That they come with such fears as often cost sickness faintness and the like which things usually be not of them that come of our selves which also come more leisurely and with more moderation 5. Such as be in such a degree of blasphemy against God usually rise not of our selves and seldom but in a Reprobate or one that hath sinned against the Holy Ghost as the Devil hath 6. Such as are against nature as to kill our selves our wives or children For the latter that arise from our nature they be sins whether they tarry so long as that they have got consent of will or not or so much as they have but inveigled the minde with some bait-like allurement yea but so as that either they do presently vanish so soon as they do arise or be cast out by us yet these I say be sins if with consent against other Commandments if without consent against the Tenth which ransacketh the heart more narrowly then any of the other It s true the longer they stay and the further they have prevailed it s the worse but the least and first thought against the Law of God is a sin and deserves the wrath of God as all Impatient Blasphemous Unbelieving thoughts all wandering thoughts when we be at the Word Sacraments Prayer or any good duty or any such on the Lords day all ill thoughts as that its in vain to serve God c. so also Disobedient Angry Revengeful Unclean Uncharitable thoughts God made us pure without any and may justly punish the contrary in us These first of all come from Original sin and who can bring good out of evil These bring forth bad effects and withdraw the heart from God to consent to and commit evil These are forbidden in the tenth Commandment else what This the heathen Philosophers never knew nor Paul himself a learned Pharisee till he was instructed in a more Spiritual understanding of the Law 1. This confutes Papists which teach That ill thoughts with consent be the least sins and that without consent they are none What is that then which Paul said I had not known that lust had heen sin but by the Law he knew that ill thoughts with consent were sins This Doctrine of Rome doth derogate from Gods glory and doth not humble a man to the purpose as it ought neither letteth it him see a multitude of such sins for which there 's cause he should be humbled 2. This sets out the absolute perfection and purity of the Lord who requires the purity of the heart and thoughts he made us perfect and requires that we should love him with our whole hearts 3. It serves notably to humble us on our knees every day to God for who knows how oft he offends this way O the innumerable vain foolish idle and bad thoughts that arise in our mindes in a day how in a Sermon or Prayer-while and on the Sabbath O if God should deal with us in justice he might condemn us for the least of these we should repent us seriously of these as of ill deeds This is that made Paul cry out O wretched man that I am and that makes the dear servants of God hang down their heads and humbles them continually and when others think highly of them for their graces they have matter to abase their vile nature and rebellious thoughts whereof some tickle the minde some get consent and are then cast out as some presently are repelled But how infinite numbers of them come through our heads as motes in the Sun as sparkles from a Fornace The want of the knowledge of these makes many a Christian when they look back at night see little to repent of which if they marked they might finde This is the Reason why civil persons be not humbled even because they take no knowledge of these thoughts whereof they have thousands on the Lords day in the times of Duties and against every Commandment whereof they take no knowledge or scarce of one of twenty and those whereof they take knowledge they think to be no sins as long as they break not out into words and actions Thought is free as the world thinks and judged at no Bar pay no Tribute True not in mens Courts because they cannot know them but before God they are and will be called in question who knows the thoughts and requires to be loved with the whole heart 4. This sets out the wonderful patience and abundant mercy of God that upon our repentance pardons so many thoughts 5. It s our duty to prevent them to the uttermost of our power and to this purpose we must labor 1. For the Spirit of God to be more and more abundant in us to mortifie this corrupt nature of ours that so this root being more and more killed may send forth fewer shoots this brand more and more quenched may send forth the fewer sparkles 2. To be ever doing some good to be in our Calling or some thing answerable thereto for if we be idle the minde will be ranging An idle person must needs have a corrupt heart swarming with ill thoughts for if the minde be not occupied about good it will be about evil its like Quicksilver ever stirring if we be riding working alone walking waking in our beds let our mindes be on some good And in duties we must keep our mindes earnestly bent thereto that being full already there may be no place of by-thoughts as when a vessel is full no more can be poured in Let 's covenant with our eyes and ears that they let in no ill thoughts especially in holy duties and on the Lords-day shut up all windows and doors so in praying whether conceived or read by our selves or heard of another our hearts must be set thereon that to every Petition they may say Amen So in hearing the Word we must be earnestly bent and fix our eyes on the Preacher and for the Lords-day be wholly in doing good and that earnestly In the time of the Sacraments both joyn with the Prayers then used and withal have holy thoughts by way of preparation and in the mean time have holy meditations about the matter present as long as we can then joyn in singing it must needs be a weary toil to them that cannot 3. To pray earnestly to God for his assistance but labor what we can all will not be prevented therefore must we grieve for those that come casting them out and that speedily They are as a flock of birds that we cannot let from hovering over our heads but may hinder from lighting on our heads if we nip
off all tediousness and wearisomness that comes upon us in the performance of any duties whether private or publique and would zealously and chearfully run the way of his commandments do we consider our freedom who were sometimes the lackies of the Devil from what and by what price are we freed let 's remember what service we have done for sin in the days of our vanity and now as much or rather more for the Lord we thought it no burthen to sin all day long and must not now to be godly all the day long we have forgotten our meat for play and yet thought the time short yea have sate up whole Nights at Cards and Dice and have spent a good part of our Goods and taken great pains to do evil and should it now be irksome unto us to serve the Lord far be it from us Verse 17. Honor all men Love the brotherhood Fear God Honor the King THis Verse consists of four Branches whereof the former two concern the duties which we owe each to other which following upon that which we are to perform towards Magistrates implieth this much That To reverence and obey our Governors is not sufficient no not to make us good subjects except we also live well one with another for as the members both of the Natural and Spiritual body are not onely coupled and joyned to the head but also each to other so accordingly are we in duty bound to both Not onely do Children obey their Parents Servants their Masters and Subjects their Governors but they must also live orderly and respectively between themselves one with another He that doth not thus cannot be a good Subject He that shall deal injuriously with his fellow-subjects wrongeth his Prince whose welfare dependeth on the multitude and flourishing state of his Subjects whether it be in body goods name or life he wrongeth his Prince I say if the party whom he harmeth be but an ordinary man much more if he be a true Christian being therefore one of his best Subjects This therefore condemneth all such as will stand in awe of Magistrates and keep out of their hands but for others they care not how much they wrong them How will some prophane desperate wretches of brazen faces by their songs and lying Libels misuse both rich and poor Ministers or others which cross them in their vile courses And are there not others close fisted like the rich man in the Gospel that will be careful to keep out of danger of the Magistrate and do their duties to them but despise all others partly blessing themselves in this that they live of no body are beholding to none have no need of any and partly of a base minde onely seeking themselves and regarding no body else oppressing and griping whomsoever they catch Neither of these be either good Christians or good Subjects Honor all men That is have regard and give due respect unto all whether they be Jews or Gentiles good or bad according to their places and that which is lovely and to be regarded in them contrary hereunto is contempt which as a thing not to be endured we are to avoid by all means Touching those whom we ought to honor they may be considered both as they are to us and as they are in themselves As they are to us they are either Superiors Equals or Inferiors all which we are to honor yea our very selves also Our Superiors whether in Wealth Wisdom Years This we must shew in these and the like particulars 1. To rise up before them 2. When they are coming towards us to go and meet them as Abraham did the three Angels and Solomon rose to meet Bathsheba 3. To bow as Abraham to the children of Heth and the rich man to our Savior Christ. 4. To give them the highest seat or place if we sit or the wall and the right hand if we walk Josephs brethren sate down according to their age 5. To give them liberty to speak in the first place Thus did Elihu we must not be full of words in the company of our Superiors 6. To give titles of reverence that we owe to them so did Sarah to Abraham Calling him Lord as Hanna did to Eli and the yong man in the Gospel coming to our Savior Christ called him Good Master We must give every man his due honor to whom honor belongeth Our Equals 1. In esteeming them better then our selves without contention or vain glory This is indeed one of the hardest things in the world because of the pride that is naturally in us but if we look for this grace of humility it may be obtained even by seeing others vertues and our own frailties and infirmities we shall come to this in truth esteeming others better then our selves 2. We must in giving honor go one before another modesty is a great cherisher of love neither is there a more deadly poison to peace and agreement nor greater mean to stir up contention and hatred then when any shal think themselves despised What a folly and madness is it in numbers that so strive for seats and places or that sometimes they cannot contain even in the publique and holy place to justle for the wall or the way What deadly hatred ariseth between many about such things that they can never be reconciled Alas This is not the way to honor as which flieth further from those that do most run after it If in modesty we would yield rather then contend either our adversaries would yield to us or if not yet the wise would commend us and disallow them Our Inferiors we must without all contempt in meekness of Spirit respect them as Brethren as our own flesh one God made them and us and of one mold and matter they may belong to God and be heirs of glory as well as we Besides as the meanest member of the body could not be spared so could not we be without them they toil dig delve card spin c. Thus will they do their duty the more chearfully and bear the place of their Inferiority when they shall see themselves though mean yet not despised which else might occasion in them discontent and impatience and increase their burthen which they do already think to be heavy enough we must be so far from being harsh cruel or strange to them as that we ought to hear them speak and regard their counsel if they be persons of understanding and good carriage as often as the Lord-will let an Inferior see that which the Superior doth not that the one may regard the other Naaman the Syrian hearkened to the counsel of his Servant to his great good neither did Job despise the cause of his Servants when they contended with him True it is Superiors are not to lose the places God hath set them in neither are bound to
with our sins as the Jews dealt with Christ kill them bury them lay a great stone upon them set a watch over them Should live unto righteousness It s not enough to be dead to sin but we must be alive to God and to his Commandments in doing all good By righteousness is meant the whole duty of man in all godliness throughout his whole conversation to God and Men When it s joyned with holiness then it stands for the duties of the second Table but alone it stands for all as in that of the Apostle Being then made free from sin ye became the servants of righteousness and to this end hath Christ dyed for us even that we should not live after the lusts of the flesh but after the will of God serving him in holiness and righteousness all the days of our life And what should we else do how else express our thankfulness we ought to be exceeding thankful even for earthly benefits how much more for this Christ dying for us O happy change We that were sometimes the slaves of sin and drudges of Satan doing base work for woful wages are now become the Servants of God employed in holy works whereof here the fruits are peace of Conscience and joy in the Holy Ghost and the end everlasting life We ought therefore to give our selves to an holy life in all things shewing hereby whose we are and to whom we belong as it s said of the Merindolians That they were known by their godly behavior wheresoever they became It was a custom among the Romans that every one should carry some note of his Trade or Profession as he went in the streets a Carpenter his Rule a Taylor his Yard or Measure c. So ought we to carry a badge of our Profession every where about us whether we go to Church be at home in our Families go to Market to our Shops or Workfolks c. even holiness throughout our whole conversation In prosperity we must shew forth sobriety in adversity patience at all times the fruits of love faithfulness uprightness c. Are we in company our speeches must be gracious and godly if alone holy and heavenly minded And this we ought not to do a little by fits in a good mood and when we list but we must walk in holiness and righteousness all the days of our life we must be continually ready to every good work we must be a peculiar people zealous of good works If these things be in us and abound great profit will redound unto us and hereunto must we employ all our endeavors By whose stripes ye were healed Now he returns again to Servants applying the benefit of Christ to them By stripes or wales of the stripes he means not onely the stripes he had of men but all his sufferings he useth the word stripes in respect of Servants because they suffered stripes of their Masters and that for their especial comfort as who did not suffer alone and whose stripes were healed through the stripes which Christ suffered All that Christ suffered for us was wholesome and saving his shame our glory his condemnation our absolution his curse our blessing his strokes our peace his death our life The most grievous stripes that he suffered have healed the most ugly and deadly sores of our sins which otherwise had been incurable We ought therefore to be content to suffer some stripes for him and for his sake and for the profession of his Name he was mockt and reviled for us may not we then be content to suffer the like for him What are we to him He became poor to make us rich if we be cut short for his sake shall we not endure it Dost thou suffer any thing for Christ bear the same patiently and great reason Christ suffered much for thee Note further that Christ dyed even for poor Servants and that therefore the meanest are to labor after their part in Christ and yet who are more negligent then the poor are for the most part and those poor that have their part in him are to be highly thankful and bear their outward wants patiently and think that God hath dealt wonderfully for them having passed by so many great wise and learned ones In the words also these particulars are implied 1. That sin is a wound or disease as a disease weakens the body so doth sin every faculty of the soul As the former also brings deformity on the body causeth pain and thereupon followeth death so doth the latter on the soul. 2. That our bodies are subject to many sicknesses and the diseases thereof are oftentimes very grievous and if those be such what are the diseases and pains of the soul the one may put us in minde of the other 3. That Christ is our Physician both for body and soul He hath both skill will compassion healeth us freely and is ever near us he hath by his Passion purchased all good for us he wrought many cures and miracles in the days of his flesh now he worketh by means and his blessing thereon 4. That sin is hateful to God as for which Christ suffered stripes Seek we therefore help in Christ we are sick of many diseases we cannot help our selves by any Medicine we can devise Christ onely can cure us This Faith apprehends for that the wounding of one should heal another is above Nature Oh! how will men being sick in body bestir themselves that they may be cured but being inwardly diseased through sin how slack are they how do they defer it to the last when it s too late There be but certain seasons to be cured in as the man at the Pool of Bethesda observed miss we not our opportunity lest we perish altogether And that we may speed at the hands of this our Physician 1. We must feel our disease and be humbled confess also and bewail the same to him 2. Earnestly beg of him to heal us 3. Hurt our selves no more as near as we can 4. Believe he will heal us 5. Suffer the words of Exhortation the preaching of the Word being the means to cure our sinful Nature 6. Take heed of dawbers that cry Peace peace 7. Take heed of all false cures as by our selves Masses Pilgrimages Indulgencies c. 8. Abide the Lords leisure in the use of the means though we should be cured by threatnings of the Word or by afflictions yea being once cured do we acknowledge the same to his glory and be we thankful for it s he alone that hath satisfied for our sins he alone through whom our sinful Nature is cured Verse 25. For ye were as sheep going astray but are now returned unto the great Shepherd and Bishop of your souls THese words are a confirmation of those immediately going before that they were healed by Christ by comparing their former state wherein they were with their
as it was in Adam but it s in Gods keeping and we are by him kept as in a Castle we are kept by his power which is Almighty above all power but how long for a few years and then left to our selves O if we were left the last year last day last hour we would fall from God if occasion were offered but kept we are by the power of God to Salvation till we come to Heaven O let us be thankful to God for this safe and happy state and keep our selves close to him and continually seek him and commend our selves to his keeping and then we be safe Here is no cause indeed of security or boldness for though we cannot fall finally yet dangerously and to our hearts smart we may if we wax careless as many times even Christians come to the sheepfold yet keep not so close to their shepherds voyce as they ought but are bold to be straying into one by-way or other as of pride covetousness contention and the like and this costs them dear who if they would have been ruled by their shepherds voyce outwardly in his Word or inwardly in his Spirit no question they might have spared this 2. Let those that be yet wandring hasten to come home to Christ and be in this most safe and happy estate let them confess and humble themselves and seek for pardon and listen to the voyce of their blessed shepherd Christ Jesus who calls them to him if they so do they shall make a happy change But when we require this of a number they set light by it and think they are well enough and better already now they may have their will and be merry and speak what they list and do what they list and get gain as they can but if they should be convert and be ruled by the Preacher they should then be tyed too short as they should do nothing have no liberty but be in bondage c. O poor Creatures that think that liberty which is deadly bondage little do those consider that their sweet meat Sin will have with it a great deal of sowre sawce And the service of God is perfect freedom tying from nothing but from sin and to nothing but that which is good and holy to our comfort here and Salvation hereafter and doth not this shrewdly hurt us Do not therefore let the foolish and beastly pleasures of sin keep you from turning to God for it will be woful in the end If we saw a man going to Execution in brave apparel with musick and his companions bringing him bowls of wine would we delight herein or count him happy would we not rather pity him for all this more need have they of pity that will needs run on in sin and following their lusts and pleasures refuse to return unto Christ the Shepherd and Bishop of their souls Shepherd c. Christ performeth the office of a Shepherd and Bishop to his people outwardly by the Ministery of his Servants the Ministers of the Word and inwardly by his holy Spirit His Ministers be the inferior Shepherds under the chief Shepherd Christ Jesus He useth them to feed his people with green Pastures to lead them to the still waters of comfort to fetch home the wandring c. who are therefore called Watchmen and Shepherds It s the duty of all Ministers that have the charge of souls to be most vigilantly watchful and exceedingly careful over the people committed to their care As watchmen must be careful in keeping the City from their Enemies as those shepherds to whom the Angels appeared in the Gospel were watching over their Flocks by Night yea as Jacob in tending his Flocks endured both the cold by night and the heat by day so much more must they in Preaching in season and out of season praying holy living and by all means seeking to gain men to God fetching home the stray ones binding up the broken comforting the feeble c. 1. This rebuketh those Ministers that in stead of watchmen are blinde and careless sleepers that delight in sleeping in stead of shepherds are wolves devouring the flock eating the fat cloathing themselves with the fleeces Those as either they cannot feed or come not at their flock to feed them so do they not care to fetch home them that are astray but rather by their ill example keep them from returning and so far are they from comforting the weak and binding up the broken as they have no skill herein or list hereto but rather set themselves against such There are but few that make Conscience to hear the Word abroad when they have it not at home yet those are more baited at for going to the Word then all they that sit in Aleho●ses or are gaming or ryoting on the Lords-day Those are also to be reproved that feed with froth in stead of sound meat as those that are negligent in feeding feed them to halves and half starve them O Lord what shall become of those when the great Shepherd Christ Jesus shall come to Judgement where shall they stand for even they that have been most careful yet are far short of all mens answers that I know I would be loathest to have the answer of a wicked and unfaithful Minister to make 2. As the Ministers must do their duties so ought the people like sheep that wander suffer themselves to be brought home into Christs flock and sheepfold and not let the Ministers labor with them year after year and yet they never the nearer being brought home to Christ And those that be brought home to Christ must be careful that they be led out still and fed in the green Pastures that they listen to their shepherds voyce and follow it carefully that so the Ministers may yield up their account with joy and not with grief and that is good for the people Heb. 13. 17. Thus if we do God shall have the glory Ministers the comfort and the people shall save their own souls And the great shepherd shall say to us Come ye blessed of my Father and set a crown of immortal glory upon our heads CHAP. III. THe Apostle proceedeth in his special Exhortations belonging to special persons namely to Wives and Husbands shewing the duties which they owe each to other from the beginning unto the eighth Verse Thence unto the eighteenth he heapeth up divers general Exhortations to sundry Christian duties belonging to all Christians Thence unto the end he entreateth sweetly of the Passion and Sufferings of Christ with the benefits redounding thereby not onely to us but to the Church in former Ages CHAP. III. Verse 1. Likewise ye wives be in subjection to your own husbands that if any obey not the word they also may without the word be won by the conversation of the wives IN this and the following Verses unto the eight the duties of wives and husbands are laid down and enforced with many
hold or continue Even as Sarah He speaks of many and yet names but one yet such a one as they could not but acknowledge worthy of imitation Though more good men be mentioned in Scripture then women that was because of Genealogies and their publike places not that their number was greater then the others yet of neither of both are so many named by multitudes as were in all those ages God said he had Seven thousand which had not bowed their knee to Baal and it s said That at our Apostles Sermon Three thousand were converted yet none are particularly named In Heb. 11. some are named with their actions and commendations but that there were multitudes of others is there also implyed When therefore we read the Scriptures we must not think that there were no more good people then we finde there named Oh! there were many thousands more onely so many are Registred as might be for our good all could not As when we come out of a City or great Town looking back we see the tops of a few Steeples and great houses but when we were near we saw a great many more so when our backs are turned upon an Age alas it s but a few we can see then in comparison of them that lived in that age Howsoever be we of men remembred or not if we be holy men and women we shall not be forgotten of God our Names are Registred in Heaven whether one day our bodies shall come as well as our souls Obeyed Abraham calling him Lord That she obeyed him the story shews for whithersoever he went and flitted she went with him and when she was bid make ready for the strangers it was done and that speedily not a word against it and her calling of him Lord is here mentioned as an usual thing done by her proceeding from a reverend regard she had of him as her husband appointed her of God In all things lawful wives must be like Sarah therein though haply somewhat against their minde they must frame themselves to their husbands disposition They must not speak to them snappishly currishly curstly nor over familiarly calling them by their Christian Names but respectively and reverently Whose daughters ye are as long as ye do well Such women as live godly purely be subject adorn themselves with grace and are patient and meek they shall not lose by it but shall have peace to their Consciences and a good Name in the Church as Sarah and be heirs of Heaven as she is being like her they shall speed as she did As men Believers are called The Sons of Abraham he being the father of the faithful so all godly good wives The Daughters of Sarah that holy Matron that had a good Name in the Church while she lived and is now in Heaven Let this be a provocation to women to perform these duties I hope we give you no bad counsel neither wrong you in requiring of you but what Sarah did and to do what may make you like her here and hereafter what answer shall those make that are no whit moved hereby ungodly impatient immodest women are not daughters of Sarah but of that wicked one the Devil and with him shall have their portion As they that could not prove their Pedigree had no portion in Canaan so they that fetch not their Petigree from Sarah and be not her daughters in subjection pure conversation sweet speech quietness in spirit are not good wives nor shall have the blessing of such And are not afraid with any amazement It may be Christian wives were afraid that if they did not set out themselves in bravery of apparel their unbelieving husbands would not care for them but seek after others For this the Apostle prescribes a remedy let them not yield to do evil for avoiding that but trust in the Lord not being afraid with any amazement It s not enough to do duties but we must do them in a right maner that makes or mars Hence many in doing duties to God do them not in praying they pray not hearing they hear not because not from the heart in Faith but out of custom and in ceremony and formality Wives must not be dutiful because else they should lead a woful life their Husbands would cut them short in their will c. These are carnal respects for Heathens to be moved with but Christian women must be dutiful out of conscience towards God and love to their Husband as they whom God hath appointed to be their heads Verse 7. Likewise ye husbands dwell with them according to knowlege giving honor unto the wife as unto the weaker vessel and as being heirs together of the grace of life that your prayers be not hindred NOw he comes to the duty of Superiors particularly of Husbands whom he onely nameth for that he that is a good and godly Husband to his Wife will be also a good Magistrate or Minister if he be called to those places And in that he teacheth Superiors their duties we may note That Superiority exempts them not from duty every honor carries a burthen along with it The more high any is in place the more is expected of him as more was of him that had the five then of him that had the two talents as they look for much duty from others so not a little is required of themselves Every Superior should make his Inferior more beholding to him then he can possibly be to his Inferior even Inferiors may be as dear unto God as themselves are And they themselves have a Lord and Master in Heaven to call them to an account The Word also doth no less ininstruct them in their duty then the others in theirs No man holds his place to be idle but the greater it is the more is required of him The Word must guide them in their places they must not do as they list Likewise ye Husbands c. In other places the Husbands duty is set forth by love no love no husband a man not an Husband but here by the fruits which are 1. To dwell with their Wives 2. As men of knowledge and understanding 3. To give them honor and that 1. Because they be the weaker vessel 2. Heirs with their Husbands of Grace and Salvation 3. The contrary would breed unquietness and so interrupt and hinder their Prayers together which were grievous Herein he instructeth Husbands as before he did the Wives they standing in no less need of instruction and no less failing in their duty then Wives who therefore must humbly patiently and christianly hear their duties with a desire to be ruled accordingly Dwell with them The Husband must forsake Father and Mother and cleave to his wife they must keep together for all the marriage ends the procreation of Children the avoiding of sin and keeping themselves chaste and for the continual comfort they ought to have each
man that can hold it in any compass look to it narrowly carry we a straight reign over it as over an unruly Horse If at any time hasty vain and unsavory speeches have passed from us le ts make conscience and repent hereof neither rest we herein to keep our tongues from evil but let our tongues be ready instruments to praise God upon all occasions as also to instruct our families to give good counsel to speak plainly lovingly and faithfully to utter gracious words tending to Gods glory and the edifying of our selves and others So shall we make it appear that our hearts are good For a good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things So shall we not onely escape many evils from God and men that an ill tongue would procure but we shall see good days have peace to our selves glorifie God here and be glorified with him for ever in his heavenly Kingdom This God enables us to do that thus doing we may enjoy the blessing And his lips that they speak no guile Here that evil of the tongue is prohibited which is more close and covert when the words agree not with the heart nor deeds It s not enough to keep the tongue from notorious and open evils but even from guileful from false deceitful speech Such as are addicted hereunto can have no good conscience but a guilty heart and they cannot prosper for God setteth himself against such neither can such so continuing come into Heaven Of this guile there be many kindes all naught yet some worse then others 1. In Religion towards God When men pretend great zeal and forwardness talk well in good company and to be well thought of speak against ill professing that its the onely thing to be in the favor of God and that we ought in all things to be ruled by Gods Word whose hearts notwithstanding are false and who dare do many things contrary when they can carry them away close This is an argument of a false heart which God hateth for he loves a true Nathanael and his eyes are upon the truth and he loveth truth in the inward parts a certain argument that their sins are not forgiven them All their fair words will not serve their turns they do meerly blinde their eyes their saying Lord Lord will not save them their fair goodly words will be but a Rod for themselves O evil servant out of thine own mouth I will condemn thee They say well but O that there were an heart in them so to do They do indeed but flatter with their mouth and lye with their tongues for their heart is not right 2. In their carriage towards men as 1. When through fear favor or advantage they sooth up and flatter their Neighbors and Superiors making their faults small or none at all nay haply terming them Vertues and extolling them beyond measure thus did the people to Herod But he that blesseth his friend with a loud voyce rising early in the morning it shall be counted a curse to him These speaking against their knowledge as they wrong themselves so do they much hurt to the parties flattered keeping them from reproof and puffing them up by shewing them a false glass wherein to view themselves therefore one being asked which were the worst Beasts answered Of wilde Beasts the Tyrant of tame the Flatterer and that such were worse then Crows which feed not on the living Beast but dead Carrion preying on them which were alive If such may be gainers they will set their tongues to sale the Devil may use them to what speech he will To speak truly and plainly men are so proud and impatient often breeds hatred if we dare not thus speak yet rather then flatter le ts be silent and say nothing 2. When men speak others exceeding fair and make great promises of kindeness but its onely for some advantage or meerly in shew for being put to it they forget their fair proffers thus do many wicked Usurers smooth men 3. When men speak very fair and courteously salute others and yet mean not well nay ill in heart salute them kindely and as soon as their back is turn'd flout at them rail on them slander them yea do them any mischief of which the Psalmist complains The poyson of Asps in under their lips 4. When men speak fair but intend mischief as the Devil when he spake to Eve Joab when he spake to Abner the Pharisees when they spake to Christ of such both David and Jeremiah complained 5. When men speak falshood and lyes in stead of truth and thereby deceive their Neighbors But hereof I have spoken elswhere at large Obj. I have a great charge therefore I must do thus and thus Sol. A mans house cannot be established by iniquity Obj. Plain dealing is good but it brings beggary Sol. A speech of a prophane and unbelieving heart As therefore we love life and would see good days let us refrain our tongues from evil and our lips that they speak no guile Let him eschew evil c. The things to be performed of them that would enjoy the forementioned benefits Evil is of sin or punishment of this last God is the Author called Evil partly because it came in with sin as a punishment thereof and partly because being tedious howsoever God turneth it to the good of his it seemeth so to us This we are ready enough to eschew without bidding though we be not wise enough to avoid the cause thereof yea eschew it by unlawful means being rather willing that sin should rest on us then a cross But the former is here meant whereof not God but the Devil and Man is the Author for he is that Fountain from whence cometh all good and out of one Fountain cannot come good and evil What is this evil of sin It s the transgression of the Law of God For his Law is a perfect Rule of Righteousness Whatsoever he requireth is good whatsoever he forbids as contrary to his Law is thereupon wicked and evil so that whatsoever is contrary to Gods Commandment either by way of Omission or Commission is evil and sin This we must eschew as the Bullet shot out of a gun or to be stricken with a sharp Sword we must abhor it as a Toad or Poyson we must hate it as the Devil and Hell fire we must hate and abhor it with a deadly an utter hatred and accordingly avoid it most carefully Reasons 1. God is thereby dishonored Rebellion is as the sin of Witchcraft When his Commandments are obeyed then is he glorified and who should not glorifie him our Maker Redeemer Preserver Landlord Lives-lord Lord and King 2. Gods wrath is provoked and that must needs be dangerous Who would stir up a fierce Lyon Who can stand before the Lord
Apostles Paul and John joyn both together Great is the force hereof as both being within us and so more able either to comfort or terrifie us then any other thing as the wind that gets within the earth shakes it most terribly and likewise so inseparable that a man cannot get from it 1. This sheweth plainly that there is a God who hath set Conscience on work thus to admonish warn comfort accuse terrifie c. Having done evil why should a mans Conscience accuse or terrifie him but that God hath ordained it should so do and accordingly it doth cite him before God and judge him before hand for not man or Angel can take the accusation of Conscience it bears record in the sight of God Why have the most unbridled despisers of God when any token of Gods wrath hath appeared run into holes and cellars under the ground yea and such wicked monsters after some foul offence though so secretly done as that they needed not to have been afraid of men yet been so much vexed and disquieted but that their Consciences informed them of God against whom they did sin and that his wisdom and knowledge did far surpass that of men or Angels as knowing not onely what is done and spoken in the world but what is in every mans heart 2. This confuteth those which affirm That we cannot be assured of our Salvation and why because we cannot know whether we believe or not c. But as we may know a Tree by the fruits so may we our Faith God gives us not grace that we should not know whether we have it or not wherefore serves Conscience but to witness what is in us Thus what Conscience is For the second The Offices of Conscience they are to bear witness and to give judgement First I say To bear witness and that 1. Of our thoughts whether they have been proud distrustful unclean wandering at the hearing of the Word or in Prayer worldly on the Lords day c. for the understanding hath two faculties one whereby it conceives or thinks this or that the other whereby it doubles upon it self and knows that it did think it The minde thinks a thought the Conscience goes beyond the minde and knows what the minde thinks so that if a man would hide his thoughts from God his Conscience can bear witness of them Thus it discovers the very bent and sway of our hearts 2. Of our will and affections whether the same be set on good or that which is evil 3. Of our speeches whether they be agreeable to Gods Word or not 4. Of our actions though never so secret Thus Davids Conscience told him that he had sinned in numbring the people but that he had not conspired against Saul howsoever he was by him persecuted so Jobs Conscience witnessed against him that he had spoken somewhat impatiently but for him that he had not eat his morsels alone c. 1. This setteth out the great mercy of God to man God hath not here left us alone but besides his Word and Ministers every man hath a keeper still going along with him who is to pry into our actions and to bear witness of them all and when we have done amiss to tell us secretly thereof that so we may ask pardon and amend and may not complain that we had none to tell us of our faults c. and that is our conscience Hereby such as belong unto God are stirred up to have recourse unto God for mercy and thereupon are pardoned after their conversion they are also hereby kept from many evils and through the checks of Conscience we are driven to repentance Happy are they that have tender Consciences and turn not the deaf ear thereto Doth our conscience tell us of any thing amiss if we do thereupon amend we make good use thereof but if we do not whereas it now speaks softly between it and us in our ear it will roar out one day when it will be heard whether we will or not namely Both at the hour of our death and on the day of Judgement Most men count their conscience a common Barretor one that troubles them as Ahab said Elias did Israel therefore is it just with God to give them benumb'd consciences that they go snorting to Hell 2. It setteth out the Equity and Justice of God that condemns no man till he hath given him both a law to guide him and a conscience to admonish him yea to accuse and condemn him When God judgeth every mans conscience shall justifie God for so doing when God shall awake the conscience then it will speak true give a righteous verdict and condemn the civilest for want of Faith in Christ and not performance of the duties of the first Table 3. It teacheth us to beware we sin not whether in thought word or deed either out of hope that none shall know it or that we shall scape for lack of witnesses or that we may alledge that we knew not that so and so to do were sins Thus we should but deceive our selves for there be witnesses enough thine own conscience is as a thousand and God as ten thousand Le ts do no other thing but that whereof we would hear again for conscience will bear witness do not we bless our selves for our sins done in secret as if none saw them or could witness any thing against us The bird in the breast knows and God knows hang down thine head then and ask mercy of God and confess thy self to him if not even thine own conscience may break it out in this world as Judas's in accusing himself whereas he was not taxed by others and many have confessed Murther Adultery Theft c. some with repentance others in hellish horror Do not any thing in hope of secrecy unless you can keep God and your consciences from being present neither be we careful for eye-witnesses of our well doing in the performance of duties It s enough if our conscience tells us we have done well yea if we be taxed for Hypocrites or otherwise be slandered its sufficient that God and our own conscience can bear witness of our sincerity and uprightness it s more then if every one should speak well of us excepting our own conscience Thus was Job thus Hezekiah comforted 2. To give judgement and that whether things be good or bad whether they be well done or ill done and this judgement is given either before our actions or after them before Conscience gives judgement thus it tells us what is good and what bad and not so barely but with some furtherance This is good therefore do it This is ill therefore do it not so Pilate knowing Christ to be innocent his conscience moved him to seek to loose him so Reuben when his brethren would have killed Joseph apprehending that to be ill and that from
on Christs passion O it s a fruitful mother of many children To know that sin is enmity against God fights against the soul brings death with it is not so available to kill sin as to know and meditate on this That Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh From the necessity of Christs sufferings whereof I have already spoken in the foregoing Chapter Note 1. Our woful and miserable condition as we are of our selves 2. The ugliness and hainousness of sin in Gods account 3. The admirable mixture of Justice and Mercy with the unspeakable love of God and Christ Jesus The Jews said He loved Lazarus well because he wept for him much more may we say That he loved us because he hath dyed for us David loved Absolom well who wished that he might have dyed for him how much then hath Christ loved us having indeed dyed for us O what love do we owe for this so great love 4. The happiness of such as do truly believe and repent their debt is fully discharged and having right unto Christ there 's nothing that the Lord will deny them 5. That we are to renounce all false ways of Salvation the Jews the Turks and the Papists way all other ways besides this 6. That we are to labor to know we have part in this yea Christ having suffered we must also bear afflictions patiently Arm your selves likewise c. The duty whereunto we are exhorted is to suffer in the flesh to mortifie our flesh that is our corrupt and sinful nature and the lusts and sins thereof both inward and outward But 1. Most are so far from mortifying their lusts that they follow them with greediness and cannot endure any to speak against them These be fools indeed to destroy their own souls by living in enmity and opposition against God 2. Some it may be refrain some lusts but others they live in and yield to and yet these will claim part in the death of Christ hope to be saved by Christ but so long as it s thus with them its impossible that they should have any part in Christ. Do we therefore labor for mortification applying the edge of the Word of God to the throat of our lusts That we may not give way hereto le ts often call to minde the threatnings of the Word the Sacraments of Baptism and the Lords Supper what God offers us there and what we convenanted with him for the crosses which our lusts have drawn on us Gods manifold mercies unto us but especially meditate on Christs death and passion which is indeed a strong corrasive to eat out sin for our corruptions remain too rank and through want of care and too much yielding thereto be not subdued as they ought Let us know that he is the best Christian not that hears most or knows most or can utter most but he that hath most power over his affections and heart Note further from hence That as our lusts fight against us so we must furnish our selves like Soldiers that we may prevail against them It s no easie thing to get out of sin or to get the Mastery thereof it s to mortifie our members to pluck out our right eyes and cut off our right hands It s easier to take any pains in offering sacrifice nay fast extraordinarily and to part with our goods with thousands of Rams and ten thousand rivers of oyl yea with our first born then to part with one beloved sin They that would overcome their lust must not stand still or be without weapons we have that within us which rebelleth against the Law of God and would lead us captive to the Law of sin which is in our members Hereunto the Devil addes his power the world also joyns herewith by ill examples bad counsels mockings revilings c. and therefore we must be resolute and play the Soldiers if we would get out of our bad course Through want hereof some even under a powerful ministery be never converted some get a little way but hang behinde in sin some are a great while ere they can get out whom the Word having called and awakened the world the Devil and their own lusts do again freshly assault nay some being truly converted yet fall back again into foul security and have yet strong corruptions and many odde qualities c. 1. This rebukes most of the world who do indeed joyn with these enemies few fight against them but fewer resolutely and therefore are led captive of them to their destruction 2. This may provoke us to put on the whole armor of God to arm our selves on all occasions and in all temptations with good thoughts and meditations of the ugliness of sin danger of it its hatefulness to God with the passion of our Savior Christ O how few arm themselves or when they do it s but to halves O this must be put on and kept on continually night and day we shall sleep never the worse there can be no truce between us and our enemies This must be kept even in the times of greatest prosperity Ships usually are cast away in storms but Christians may miscarry when its calm Thus was it with David he abode constant in all Sauls storms but in the time of peace was carried away with Bathsheba's beauty It must be kept on even in our old age and till death for then will the Devil set himself most against us and both Noah Moses and others did then catch worse foils then ever before Suffered in the flesh To mortifie our corrupt nature is called suffering in the flesh and the truth is its hard to say whether is harder to suffer bodily torments and pains or to mortifie a mans lust O it s a death to part with them yea when in a man after long strife between the grace of God and his corrupt nature in the work of his conversion grace prevails it s even as the pangs of death as when the Devil went out of the childe he threw him down and he lay foaming as if he had been dead O it s not so easie a matter as the blinde and prophane world imagine Hath ceased from sin That is living in any sin For he that is born of God sinneth not and He that committeth sin is of the Devil That he no longer c. The whole time of our life that remains after we are called to repentance ought to be spent in the service of God and practice of Repentance and a new life We owe all our life to him all the days of our life the whole time we owe all to him who hath made and preserved us nothing to any other What time therefore we have spent in sin we have robb'd God of it and so ought willingly to give him the remainder redeeming that is past with all diligence The time past we know but
Have no league of Amity with them to have common friends and enemies as to help them against their enemies or crave their help against ours There be some that speak minsingly of the Religion of Rome as that there be indeed sundry differences between them and us but that they are petty and mean ones and of no great moment but such as if we would yield a little and they a little there might be a reconciliation made Wo be to such dawbers that would go about to reconcile God and the Devil Light and Darkness c. There are sundry differences which are main ones and against the foundation and such as except they will renounce we neither can nor must ever joyn with them So of the Papists themselves some will speak very favorably O they be good honest men and many good things they do if it were not a little for their Opinions c. Do such speak wisely they be abominable persons for they be Idolaters and those God calls abominable worshipping other Gods and the true in a false maner namely in Images If they were Murtherers and would take away our lives Adulterers and would abuse our wives Thieves and would take away our goods O we would cry out upon them and say They be abominable but we have no feeling of any thing which hurts our souls nor of that which is foully against God and his glory it s an Argument of self love and little grace It should go more to our hearts that its against GOD and his glory then any thing that were against our selves any way We ought to pray to God to convert them or remove them and that they may be curbed and their eyes may fail ere they have their desire of Toleration of their abominable Religion For the Idolatry among our selves Some conceive of God as of a God onely merciful and not just which emboldens them to go on in their sins without fear or care supposing that when they have abused him at their pleasure all their days if in the end they utter but a few good words to him he will be as well pleased as if they had served him all their time This is to conceive an Idol and not God for he is as just as merciful the one no more then the other Sundry also among us make a god of their Belly Profits Pleasures Honor Children Ease c. seeking onely these setting their heart and delight in these trusting in these yea to compass these not caring though they offend God for whatsoever a man loves more then God or trusts in besides God he makes it his god Thus the glutton makes his Belly as the covetous man his Wealth his god O vileness and extreme baseness We that live under the Word preached should learn to know God to be All-sufficient and to labor to make him our portion and inheritance our joy and our castle He that hath God hath all he that wants him in the midst of all hath nothing Blessed is the people so the person whose God is the Lord not who are wealthy have great friends c. and who accordingly love him above all set him up in their hearts trusting in him onely satisfying themselves in him yea him alone and loving all other things in and for and under him Others there are that profess Religion and worship God indeed but in a false maner they pray but depart not from iniquity hear the Word but hate to be reformed are baptized but keep no Covenant receive the Lords Supper but without Knowledge Faith and Repentance but God he is a Spirit and therefore will be worshipped in Spirit and Truth They that worship him as most do they worship an Idol namely Such a God as is content with the outside with Ceremonies but so is not the true God the service of such is abominable against such judgements have been both denounced and inflicted See 1 Sam. 15. 23. Psal. 50. 16. Isa. 1. 11. and 58. 5. Jer. 7. 4. Ezek. 14. 33 27. Mic. 6. 7. Our outward worshipping of God must proceed from our inward Knowledge Love Fear and Trust in God and must be joyned with obedience and Reformation If thou repentest not of thine Hypocritical service thy wages will be according to thy work This makes Gods enemies speak ill of our Religion and hold off even because though indeed we worship God and profess well yet our peoples lives be so far wide we that enjoy the Gospel and the true means of the right knowledge and service of God ought not to worship the true God onely but in a right maner What though we be not Idolaters we cannot almost be so though we would yet we may and without repentance shall certainly perish for our ceremonious and Hypocritical serving of God and so much the rather because we had the means to bring us to the true knowledge of him which is denyed to the common sort of the Papists Assuredly we shall lose all our labor if we use it to no better purpose and our souls too among the Hypocrites Verse 4. Wherein they think it strange that you run not with them to the same excess of ryot speaking evil of you HEre 's the prevention of an Objection If we should now break off might some say and no longer live as we have done but take the course that you prescribe we should be wondred at as an Owl among Birds They would think strangely of us as of fools and mad folks and hate us and speak evil of us that we should not be able to abide it Others also might say We which have followed your counsel have made our selves a gazing stock and pulled all men upon our tops even those that liked us well before speak ill of us and what we shall do we know not The Apostle Answereth I know it is so with some of you and will be so with the rest but be not dismaid for as it s set down in the following Verse they shall answer for this wickedness at the time which God hath appointed when we shall receive the Crown of glory for our well-doing and constant continuance therein In this Verse note 1. The minde of the wicked towards Gods children their course seems strange to them 2. The effect hereof in their words They speak evil of them 3. The ground or reason hereof For that they run not with them into the same excess of riot Wherein they think it strange Hence note that Such as mean to renounce their sins and take an holy course shall finde much opposition undergo the hatred and ill will of most Lot was wondred at in Sodom as doubtless the old world wondred at Noah for making the Ark and Pharaohs Courtiers at Moses his choyce Michol mockt despised David in her heart when he danced before the Ark Nebuchadnezzar wondred that the three children refused to bow to his Image which others did Festus thought Paul mad In
time of Popery they wondred at the Martyrs that they would not at some times yield a little as to speak a few words c. Thus it is now for the world lives still and is like it self If any dare not play or riot or talk of the world on the Lords Day they are thought to be mopish fools who had rather be poring on a book then doing as others If any care not to get by Lying Deceiving and the common ways of the world they are wondered at as fools so if any now and then omit some of their businesses and go to hear the Word they are accounted idle as Pharaoh said to the Israelites and such as have little to do If any be humbled for their sins they think them melancholy and that they will be out of their wits and they would not be in their case for no good and would have them be merry and play it away If any at the hearing of the Word perceiving it to be high time to forsake his old wont and take a better course now dare not do as he hath formerly they wonder at him What! art thou turned Puritan will they say Wiltst thou forsake thy sports and merriments which they think a little heaven cast off thine old companions and sworn brethren c. What wondrest thou at them for thus doing What for coming out of the fire for taking pains to save their souls for not daring to wound poyson or destroy themselves by provoking God for taking pains to do that which must keep them by Gods appointment with all needful graces for being troubled about their sins and the danger thereof for longing to be in the favor of God c Assuredly thou hast small reason so to do but it s for that they savor not the things of the Spirit of God for that they perceive not the things that are of God are blinde and cannot see afar off If we should see one of a strange Country come through our Town we would wonder at their strange attire nothing like ours The children of God be not of this world but chosen out of the world and may not fashion themselves like the world but be of the fashion of Heaven the world therefore wonders at them 1. Therefore let none think that if they turn to God and take a good course that they shall be generally beloved and well thought of of God Angels and good men they shall but of the world they shall be wondered at and hated ere you begin make account hereof even to have the ill will of those which have loved you yea it may be the displeasure and frown of Father Mother c. yet let not this hold you off nor keep you still in your old course as long as God and good men love you what need you care Wo be to you when all men speak well of you better be wondered at and hated of the world for well-doing then condemned of God for ill-doing 2. For those that are entred into a good course already and finde it thus let them not be discouraged it s no new thing the worthy servants of God have been counted fools and madmen for well-doing We must have an Heroical courage not to be daunted herewith we must not think the worse of our selves because the world thinks basely of us who know us not nor our course which of them that be very fools indeed is counted foolishness we may wonder as much and much more at them that be so desperate to go on in their sins and take no thought for death or day of Judgement that hang over a pit and yet can be merry that run on in the score and never think of reckoning that dare buy a few short profits and pleasures at so dear a rate at the loss of their souls that deprive themselves of the inward and true comfort and peace they might have in God and spiritual things as the Word and Sacraments for the short and vain pleasures of honor and deceiveable riches that prefer Hogs meat before Angels food We have cause I say to wonder at their folly and madness and to pity them thanking God that hath not left us in their woful blindeness and miserable estate If thus by wondering at them we can do them any good so it is but let not their wondering hurt us 3. For those that think strange of Gods servants for not doing ill or for well doing they bewray themselves to be of the world and so to be carnal They that mislike the fashion of Gods children it s a sign they be of another Countrey not of Heaven and that they be none of wisdoms children for all they justifie wisdom wheresoever they see her and in whomsoever Labor therefore not onely not to think their course strange but to acknowledge it the best course in the world and accordingly to follow it That you run not with them This sheweth that Though we be dull and dead and slow to that that is good yet our proneness and eagerness to that that is naught is exceeding great We can run to Play-sports Vanities and Follies please us but we come to the Word Prayers and good Duties with a leaden heel at this we are drowsie but at the other watchful enough Many run so fast in the ways of sin and make such haste that they run themselves quite out of state and credit with God and man and out of their health too and have brought untimely destruction upon themselves they have made such haste that it seemeth they thought long till they were in hell Too too many also are now a running but it s in the broad way wherein the faster they run the sooner they come to destruction if it were well considered they can see small cause to make such haste O that they could be perswaded to turn head and enter into the way of good men and then let them run as fast as they will run the race set before them so run that they may obtain and as before we rejected all counsel that might do us good so now let us shake off all impediments whether within or without us that would hinder us in our Christian course or from running the way of Gods Commandments The faster we have heretofore run in vanity run we now the faster in the right way we could then take great pains think the time short spend our money in vanity now after the same maner le ts do the contrary it s our great fault that we did run apace after the world with the profits and pleasure thereof but now our fault is that we go a foot pace nay a Snails pace in goodness To the same excess of riot When men give way to sin and their hearts are set on evil there is no hoe but they will run over head and ears As the Sea if it break over a bank it can scarcely
thy felf as lay hold on Christ for Salvation If any man speak c. Whoso is in the Ministery ought to Preach no gift makes a man a Minister allowed of God but the gift of preaching even to be able to open the Scriptures soundly and apply the same wisely to the peoples edifying How shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard saith the Apostle and how shall they hear without a preacher and how shall they Preach except they be sent That is gifted and quallified by God for the place even being able to do that which is apt to convert souls which no gift else can do but that of preaching the Word The Scriptures read are but as a goodly Carpet folded up together but by preaching the beauty thereof appeareth This our Savior enjoyned his Disciples and the same did the Apostle Paul require of Timothy 1. This rebukes those which howsoever having an outward calling they stand in the room of Ministers and therefore their actions are not to be counted void or nullities run before they are sent are blinde watchmen Messengers without an errand dumb Dogs as Idols having mouthes but speak not c. 2. This rebukes a number of silly people which conceive it sufficient if their Minister be but a Reader We have a very honest man will such say true he cannot preach but he doth his good will and we can desire no more of a man and a very fellow-like man he is c. But if it happen they have a godly Preacher what is their note then we have a Minister I would we had never known him some say he is learned and he preacheth indeed but he is so troublesome he hath spoiled our Town quite we were all as quiet as could be till he came but now there is such finding of faults and bringing up new Orders as we cannot tell what to say a good many of the best of the Parish will do what they can to remove him c. Thus the world loves reading Ministers They say of Schollars they be the most conscionable They care not how little they have for their money but its true also of a number of silly miserable people They can have no more of a man then his good will they say But they would not say so of a Carpenter or any Workman or Servant they hire if they do not the business they are set about they would have others Let him speak as the Oracles of God That is both Preach the very Truth and Word of God and as its meet or as it becomes the Word to be handled Ministers must Preach the Word of God they must not deliver any thing to their people but that which they have received of God So did both the Prophets and Apostles they stand in Gods room and are to bring his Message neither must they deliver any word whereof they may not truly affirm Thus saith the Lord This is the Word of the Lord Nothing else feeds the soul other things are poyson or chaff yea we may answer for what we say before God upon our salvation or damnation 1. This reproves divers as namely such as by their erroneous Doctrine destroy souls they give in stead of an egge a scorpion and for food poyson Such as by telling strange and forged miracles of this and that Saint endeavor to uphold one lye of Popery or other Such as teach mens traditions or their own devices and opinions contrary to Gods Word Such as wrest the Word of God and discourage the hearts of the godly and strengthen the hands of the wicked making their Text speak what God never meant Such as Preach Gods Word but so mingled with mans inventions as they Preach not Gods Word but their own fancies Thus many stuff their Sermons with Authorities of men as of Heathen Poets Philosophers Historians and that in strange tongues which though turn'd into English yet what a loss of time what a breaking of the peoples attention must there needs be hereby what thrusting upon people mens authority use indeed may be made of those in private and humanity serves as well as an handmaid to Divinity but its Gods Word onely which can stablish the Conscience If we use them publiquely the same must be done sparingly to special purpose on some special occasions as when we have to do with Atheists c. and not to the common people 2. This may instruct people that they hear nothing at least receive nothing but the Word of God My sheep hear my voyce saith our Savior and a strangers voyce they will not hear Therefore they must be able to try what they hear we must not be like children carryed about with every wind of doctrine Solomon counts it the property of a fool to believe every thing if we should in stead of being fed we might be poysoned we must with the Bereans search whether the things we hear be so and so they were neither curious nor captious yet they would receive nothing but the truth A man may tell money after his own Father not because he thinks he would deceive him but because he may be deceived we take not upon us to have dominion over your Faith that you should believe whatsoever we say because we say it but if it be not according to Gods Word take it but upon exchange All that we hear and Ministers deliver must be according to the Scriptures which is the rule and touchstone and when people have knowledge and can try what we ●each we should be far from being angry and saying It was never merry world since every Taylor and Shoemaker could talk so much of the Scriptures and finde faults with mens preaching would we have the peoples eyes out True the Papists cannot abide it in the people but tell them They must believe as their Ministers believe c. This is as bad a sign in them as may be But alas we have cause to complain of peoples ignorance it were even just with God to let them fall into the hands of deceivers as having got no knowledge all this while Ministers must preach as it becomes the Word of God even with all reverence and authority with all courage and boldness yea so as that they declare by their lives that they believe it to be Gods Word even by being first in the practice thereof and obedience thereto 1. This serves to reprove divers as namely those that mingle tricks and conceits to tickle the ear and are all in their Inkhorn terms riming and running on the letter c. together with those that have itching ears and delight in such things It s a sign of a sickly ill disposed stomack to whom the wholesom food of the Word is not sweet except it have some such strumpetly sawces Those that through sear keep back Gods counsel not revealing his whole will those that live daily in
the same sins which they rebuke in others not fearing those judgements which they denounce on others nor doing those duties they call for of others these as the Scribes and Pharisees are blinde guides these make the people think Preaching is but for a fashion and they must speak somewhat when they be in place but it s not to be regarded for if it were they would not do thus and thus themselves Thus as Eli's Sons they make the Lords people loath the Sacrifice of the Lord yet must not people thus stumble Do as they say take the good and leave the ill men will take up money out of the dirt Miserable is the condition of such Ministers as give this foul offence weak are those people that take it 2. This may instruct people 1. To be duly prepared by prayer ere they come to the hearing of the Word being come they must with all reverence attend thereto It s Gods Word they hear the Lord himself with whom they have to do O how few come thus nay most men behave not themselves so well as they should to a man advising them of good will There are now few such as Cornelius want of preparation is one main cause why so few profit by hearing How many hear unreverently or as if they were weary and sleepy Is this to hear it as the Word of God Hence it is that men not taking notice of their miserable and damnable state or that the way to Heaven is so strait content themselves with their present state Would not men be thrust out of doors if they did so before their Prince should he speak unto them 2. People must not be afraid to frequent and attend on the Word preached they must not be ashamed hereof 3. They must shew their account hereof by their obedience hereto O look to it you have not to do with us that cannot tell when you be gone hence whether or not you practise the same but you have to do with God whose Word you hear who will go hence with you and knows your sitting down and your rising up yea and all your ways and both can and will deal with you accordingly In the fear of God let us look better to this and resolutely set down with our selves That whensoever we come to hear the Word we come to hear God himself speaking to us If it were not so we durst not speak it for our lives the matter concerns us no less then you If any men minister He proceedeth to other Offices in the Church and ayms no doubt at them whose Office it was to distribute and look to the poor The word minister signifieth to do service and so may be taken more generally even every man in his Office and Calling must be a minister to his brethren The Magistrate is so called Rom. 13. 4. and so the Exhortation also may concern them However the point may be this that All that have Office one way or other in the Church must do the same faithfully we have them that answer in some sort to the Officers in the Primitive Church Churchwadens must look to mens Maners and spy what is amiss who prophane the Lords day neglect the worship of God be idle and riotous c. These they must admonish and if thereupon they amend not complain of them Constables must suppress filthy houses break the knots of lewd persons prevent and root out disorder to the utmost of their power The Overseers of the poor ought to be wise and faithful and not think it enough to take money with one hand and pay it out with the other but they must distribute it with wisdom to every one according to their need to the best most and with best encouragement to the other with gentle rebuke and admonition even those of best quality report and credit have been entrusted with this business There are prophaners of the Lords day such as then lie in bed and regard not the House of God There are Swearers Railers Riotous persons such as bring not up their Children in any Calling There are idle persons c. these would be well lookt to and often admonished and no more given them then needs must There 's a company of idle Wenches which keep at home with their friends where there is no need of them or crowd into one house or other and live at their own hand and that either because of idleness they refuse to go to service or having been in service because they may not do as they list they will no longer be Servants but live by themselves This is a foul and dangerous abuse not to be suffered in Towns Headboroughs and chief men in Towns ought to provoke Officers to their duty and encourage them doing well yea countenance and stand by them as whom God hath lifted up for this end 1. This rebuketh the exceeding coldness and carelesness of Officers that take no pains to prevent or redress disorder Thus Overseers think it enough if they gather and pay out the money and bring in a true account what 's this It were hard if men should rob the Poor a curse would follow it but for looking into their state and maners and with relieving their bodies to do good to their souls Who doth this This is rare indeed But if we have an office we must wait on our office we are not altogether born for our selves Every office is an honor and carries a burthen along with it we must bestow some time thereon it s not lost God will requite it and cursed is he that doth his work negligently though others have been careless and though haply you may be counted more busie and curious then needs yet whether your office be great or small set your selves with care and diligence about it Hereby much good will come to the Town and Poor in particular God shall be glorified and you shall reap much comfort with a good report in Gods Church 2. This bewrayeth a great fault in Towns for making choice of such to Offices as be no way fit nor careful to execute them A common practice The chief men shift them from themselves Solomon saith He that sends a message by the hand of a fool that is one unfit for it it as he that cutteth off the feet That is as he that cuts off a mans feet and then bids him go when he hath not wherewith As of the ability which God giveth All ability to discharge any Office or Calling comes from God we have no wisdom or ability this way of our selves every good gift is from above God gave Saul another heart that is fit to rule which he had not before and Solomon craved of God a wise and an understanding heart and as Magistracy is of God so the Ministers Office so the Deacons so others 1. Call upon God for endowments for such places as he calls thee
pass to it at death so shall they have no stop at the day of judgement Among earthly Judges when a cause hath gone current on a mans side a great while yet at last either by corruption of Jury or Judge or by some evidence come to light not seen before all may be dasht and turn'd the other way It shall not be so at Gods judgement seat there will be question made of the damnation of some but no question made of the salvation of any of the godly But the difficulty is in this life it s an hard thing for a man to get to heaven called therefore a Straight gate and Narrow way a hard thing to come to be a Christian a converted person and an hard thing to continue therein and grow forward God hath much ado to bring us to grace and then much ado to hold us therein as he had a great deal ado to get his people out of Egypt and into Canaan sometimes themselves by murmuring lingering c. and sometimes others as Pharaoh the Red-sea c. proving hinderances thereto so hath he to get one of us out of the bondage of the Devil out of the Egypt of sin The Devil holds the world hinders yea our own wretched nature is not willing to come out What a stir hath he how many Sermons Threatnings Promises secret gripes of Conscience Warnings of the Spirit purposes to come out and yet keep in still ere we will yield yea how is God fain almost to pull us out by some crosses or sharp afflictions as the Angels pulled Lot out of Sodom how hardly are we throughly humbled for our sins when cast down how hardly comforted when we have got it how hardly do we keep it what a stir with our hearts to leave our old courses and take new and when we have begun yet what ado to hold out what revolting and backsliding hearts have we ready to wax cold and to linger after our old lusts so hard it is to do any good duty well The Devil like Pharaoh pursueth us and labors by all means possible to hinder us from all good altogether or from the right performance of it so also to draw us to all evil Then the world like Pharaohs Soldiers labors to hinder us by their ill example by ill counsel by vails of profits and pleasures and if these not by reproaches and troubles that it will raise up Our own Nature is worst of all as having a lingering after our old sins as the Israelites after the fleshy pots of Egypt sometimes we think like them we shall never hold out there be such lets in the way high walls and Anakims c. so that we get forward hardly as a man that were to go up a steep hill and had three great weights hung at his back so that we have such continual need of the Word Sacraments Prayer Meditation Conference Watchfulness that unless hereby we wax cold and grow out of order nay notwithstanding all these yet what ado to keep our hearts and lives in order and our selves within compass but we slip and stumble and grieve and up again and down again yea if the Lord to all these means should not adde some one or other affliction it would be yet more hard The Lord is fain to pull us with that strong cord also and this is chiefly meant here they are scarcely saved even because they are forced to be brought through many troubles so that as a man that is to climb such a steep hill as he cannot fasten his feet but is fain to get Daggers in his hands and sticking them into the ground c. may be said hardly to get up and as when two Armies fight for a Town one while one part prevails another while the other at last the better side prevails but notwithout much pains many wounds shrewd blows and continual labor we may say They got the Town hardly the like may be said in this particular Who knoweth not the truth hereof in his own experience how hardly canst thou be humbled how hardly drawn to renounce thy lusts how art thou fain to wrestle before thou canst do any good what continual need hast thou of prayer good company c. yea who knowing any thing seeth not he hath need of his crosses and that it was good for him that he was afflicted 1. This crosseth the most gross and yet most common conceit of the world that its an easie matter to be saved that there 's no need of such preciseness but that if men mean well God will be content and though one have lived badly yet at what time soever they repent for which a quarter of an hour is enough it shall be well with them and hence it is that the Word and our Preaching is of such small account and that so few take any pains to be saved but take pains for the belly and back and to grow rich c. Ignorant persons look not out but content themselves with a blinde good meaning without any part of a good life so prophane persons so worldlings so civil ones Though the Scripture requires us to labor strive give all diligence study seek yet will not they take any pains nay not onely so but they laugh and gibe at them that labor herein as fools or idle persons What art thou woful wretch that darest cross the Lord so directly He saith It s a strait way and few finde it and to this end bids Strive Thou sayest it s no such matter If it were as thou dotest Christ might not onely have spared those speeches but indeed the whole Scriptures for what use of any but to bid people live as they list and at last cry God mercy and all is well No God must make new Scriptures and chalk a new way to Heaven ere ever thou shalt finde that thou lookest for But what art thou that neither wiltst take pains to save thine own soul nor canst be content that others should Dost thou think that they be idle persons that take pains to hear the word O they could follow the world and that too hard but that they know one thing is needful Could they not sit at home in their chairs or keep their beds as well as rise and toil c. but that they know that they cannot so get Heaven but that they have need to use all means and that little enough though thou seest no such thing Indeed to lead a careless life to do good if it come in the way and if ill come in the way to be as fit for that c. a few Sermons and little hearing may serve for such a life but this is not the way to get Heaven If ever thou wouldst be saved thou must change thy minde and practice and believe the Scriptures that its a strait way and accordingly bend thy self to begin to take pains to see and confess thy sins to labor for faith to turn
bring a good stomack and take it in well by diligent hearing digesting it by meditation and conference that they may grow thereby O woful people in many places that have excellent Preachers and as good feeding as may be and yet have lean ill-favored and mishapen souls being inwardly as Pharaoh's seven kine appeared outwardly as if they had never had a good meals meat whence is this some will not come to Church where the food is some come but presently fall asleep some have their stomacks so cloyed that they have no appetite others put it out like wanton children These are authors of their own wo their blood shall be on their own heads what answer will they make to God when they shall be called to an account for this what a grief is this to Gods Ministers when they have made their provision they are gladest if their guests come and have good stomacks that nothing be lost 3. While their Minister is feeding them carefully they must be careful to feed him with necessary and convenient maintenance that he may not be troubled or distracted If a sitting Hen should go much from her nest to seek for food for her self the eggs could not but chill If Ministers should not be maintained how could they go on in this great work contrarily how many purloin from their Ministers how many endeavor to get their Tythes at an under-rate c Doth their Minister feed them carefully and should not they allow him to the utmost should not they be as careful of him as he is or ought to be of them how else shall he maintain himself and his family how else keep hospitality and be helpful to the poor how else succor poor Christians Schollars and Strangers that resort to him fo● succor A good Minister had need be a Treasurer helping to so many good uses 2. That Ministers must preach the Word soundly they must not give stones instead of bread for an egge a Scorpion for a fish a Serpent for food Poyson Not onely they must not teach erroneous Doctrine but also not brackish and unsavory points that jar with Scripture though not in the highest degree They must not Preach mens inventions and Traditions what is the chaff to the wheat not idle things frothy stuff c. to the discouraging of the good and heartening of the wicked This were not to feed the flock neither are we to follow or embrace any such Doctrine 3. That Ministers must Preach diligently in season and out of season watching every opportunity to do their people good and that in regard of their manifold wants and great weaknesses 1. This rebukes them that having flocks feed them but seldom haply once a year quarterly or monethly Sermons they think more then enough 2. It rebukes the woful backwardness of many people that howsoever wisdom cryeth and lifteth up her voyce in the streets yet for their Oxen and Farms will not intend this Market count her wares but as dead commodities How many worthy Ministers have been forced to give over their preaching for want of company as others to preach to a few O what lets have without us besides our own untowardness to call home the uncalled at one time or other to build up by little and little the good Alas even they that have been somewhat forward are subject to decay and to become worse again A Ministers work is not like a Carpenters or Masons as they leave it they finde it but he may leave some in a good minde who yet within a while after are cooled or turned away The flock of God These words are a reason whereby he enforceth his Exhortation The people are the Lords not ours all are his by creation but he hath a company in the world who are his by another right namely of Redemption as being bought by the precious blood of Christ O unspeakable price They must therefore be dear to him for such things as costs us much we much set by If God gave his Sons blood for them his Spirit to them and prepareth Heaven for them then they be dear to him therefore he will call to a strict account for Souls not one shall perish but he will have account how and by whose default The King will have account of every of his Subjects even the meanest how he comes to his end so will the Lord of Souls 1. This teacheth all men to take heed of Souls they meddle with Jewels with costly Ware when they meddle with them Woful is the state of all unconscionable Patrons that to incroach a great part of the Livings in their gift put in of Jeroboam Priests when the Souls of Congregations were at their mercy to save or destroy them woful also is the state of such whom they thus put in 2. Let Ministers do their duties as they that must be called to an account for their flock be the Lords his Sheep his Lambs but ●ost use them not as if they were the Lords 3. This teacheth people to submit themselves to the guidance direction teaching and government of their Shepherds whom God hath set over them They must be content to be kept within the fold to be kept from rank places that would rot them to be kept in bare pasture to be often dressed c. As sheep follow their Shepherds voyce so must Gods people the whistle of Gods Word by his Ministers 3. This rebukes numbers which will not be kept in but stray where they list These straglers will fall into the Devils mouth they will run into the rank rotten places of unlawful profits and pleasures do what Ministers can they will not be dressed c. Thus thousands dye of the rot and of other deadly diseases notwithstanding all the care of the most diligent Shepherds these be none of Christs sheep his follow the mouth of his under-Shepherds and lose nothing by it as who shall have eternal life but these be Goats and its easie to know their place where it will be even on the left hand to hear their doleful doom Again By Flock the whole company that is under a Ministers charge being to be understood thus much may be noted that A Minister must have regard to all his people even to the meanest from the one end of the Church to the other No Shepherd will willingly lose the least sheep of his fold and good Husbands and Housewives do not onely look to their Silver Vessels but to those of Brass Pewter Stone Wood so must we take care of all look to all 1. This rebukes those Ministers which preach so loftily and in divers tongues and after such a fashion as is quite beyond the reach of most and onely apply themselves to a few of the chief rather in ostentation seeking themselves then Gods glory or the peoples souls It were unreasonable for a Minister to preach if
indeed can it be well decided this we are sure that there is no more weighty part of any Ministers duty nor none like unto it then to Preach the Word of God about which the Pope with his Popelings have no minde to take pains Those that have been godly Bishops have exercised themselves diligently in the same 2. It condemns the lawless freedom of the whole Popish rabble from the Civil Magistrate which is wicked for though our Ministery be above Magistrates and all even Princes are to be subject thereunto and our duty is to discharge our duty in rebuking sin in all yet as we be Citizens so we are under the Magistrate and he hath power to punish faults in Ministers as well as of any other 2. That Ministers must not carry themselves proudly highly and disdainfully accounting of others as a company of Clowns and simple fellows but account them the people of God and such as they must care for serve and attend in all painfulness for the Salvation of their souls carrying themselves so lovingly and amiably as that the meanest may be bold in good sort to speak unto them Nor 3. Must a Minister rule them rigorously and with violence and subdue them with suits or strong hand God cannot away with such Shepherds Neither will any rule more Tyrannously over people then those that take least pains to seed them but they must win men by the Word If any be obstinate they must deal more roundly with them yet still after a Spiritual maner and no carnal kinde of violence which is not so fit for a Minister nor so like to do good if they be unbridled and unruly let the Magistrate deal with them A Minister must be kinde to those that have any good they that be not as he would have them yet must not be cast off but wait with patience shewing all good desire of winning them for though a Minister is over the people yet not so as that he may do with them what he list but as God requires So is the Father over the Children yet must not he provoke them to anger and Husbands are over their Wives yet must not they be bitter to them The Minister is over the people as a Shepherd over his sheep he must feed them catch them with his hook see what they ayl dress them binde their legs being unruly if they range out fetch them in if they come not at his whistle set his dog at them to scare them but he must not pend them up all the day and starve them break their legs or their backs worry them with his dog sell or change them away c. The Minister is over the people as the Nurse over the Childe committed to her namely to feed it tend it and take pains about it but not to hurt maim starve it 1. This rebukes the contrary in some Ministers who because they are over the people therefore like some yong Husbands that having married before they were wise misuse their wives because they be their heads carry themselves haughtily what are they but a company of Clowns Swains a company of simple fellows what are they They are those you are appointed to tend and such as you must give an account of to God such as may belong to God as well as you haply rather then you Members of Christ as dearly bought as you and Heirs of Heaven such as must put a Crown upon your head at the last day such as maintain you of their labors that you may attend their souls you must win them by the Word by publique and private perswasions by a good life and not by a strong hand by suing them at Law and contending with them 2. If Ministers must not Lord it over the people then much less people over them a Minister hath some colour they none To set light by him to check or controll him to insult over him use him at their pleasure because they have purses c. is wicked what is he will they say he is but a Minister a Parson a Priest c. what is he but a Minister Is that a disgrace to him Is that a base Calling Is there any more high and honorable what is he He is the man you must depend on for the means of your Salvation by whose Ministery you must be pulled our of the jaws of the Devil and power of sin and converted to God It s he that hath power to binde or loose you and as he doth so shall it be done in Heaven he hath power to open the door or shut it against you as he seeth your behavior To the good that be converted he is their Spiritual Father to whom they owe more then to their Natural Father of the one they had a being of the other a well-being of the one born into the world a man and a childe of wrath of the other born again into the Church a childe of grace To these also a Nurse to cherish them confirm strengthen and comfort them and an helper of their faith to the Kingdom of Heaven But for the wicked he hath power to shut them out as dogs from partaking the Childrens bread yea to deliver them up to Satan if they deserve it therefore say not who is he or what is he For he that despiseth them despiseth Christ himself Touch not my Prophets and do mine anointed no harm He hath rebuked Kings and the greatest for their sakes nay even the least as those Children that mocked the Prophet have not scap'd free yea to misuse them in body goods or name and offer them indignity is the ready means to provoke the Lord to wrath and indignation Over Gods heritage A reason against Lordly and Tyrannous dealing People be Gods Heritage The word signifies elsewhere a lot because Heritage used to be divided by lot The word is of the plural number whereby is meant particular Congregations over which God appointeth particular Ministers as being parts of the Heritage of God which is the whole Church of God in Heaven and Earth and every particular Congregation is a part of it and as a Farm or Manor committed to a Spiritual Husbandman to yield the Lord the fruit thereof The word here used the Papists apply onely to Ministers but improperly for the people also be the Lords lot portion and the rod of his inheritance though indeed Levi was Gods part in a special maner set aside for Gods service in his Temple yet then and now all Gods Church are his Heritage The people is the Lords Heritage He hath bought his Church at a dear rate he plants it waters it and hedgeth the same in 1. This rebuketh those Ministers that use them at their pleasure kill them sell them misuse them c. but they shall be countable to God for them as Jacob to Laban for those sheep that were lost or torn We must use them as
in vanity but the Scriptures call for Religion even at the hands of yong men There are also Reasons to disswade yong men from tainting their yong years and laying up matter for their age to roar for the sins of their youth from losing this freest and fittest time The fittest because they be fresh and apt to conceive remember and are strong which way they set themselves to good or evil The freest as not being incumbred with cares worldly businesses c. old age also is dull and unfit to learn the trade of Christianity is to be learned betimes You yong men and maids and yonger women shew your humility in being ready to listen and follow any good councel or example If you have seen God go before you in your Elders and follow them not your judgement will be great and sin without excuse There be indeed Religious and sober good youths and yong folks married and single and such as shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven before their Elders children before their Parents and Servants before their Masters and yong men which be able to instruct and be paterns to the aged These are comely persons but how few be of these These also must remember to reverence their Parents Masters Elders though they should not be for knowledge or grace as they ought and themselves have more then they All of you be subject one to another He lays not this duty on the yong onely as in the former words but now requireth it of all even of Superiors to Inferiors and equalls each to other not that he forgets himself or would lay all common and make a confusion as if the Superior ought as much submission to his Inferiors as they to him and so equals each to other not so but they must submit themselves to them in another kinde as Superiors to Inferiors to care for them and seek their good and bear with them and equals to stoop to do each other good and to bear one with another and yield and give way to each other not standing stifly upon terms For Superiors they must submit to their Inferiors even Princes Councellors Nobles Judges c. must beat their heads study and take pains for the good of the Subjects as the Subjects must submit to them in reverence obedience tributes c. So they care for them put themselves to pains to do them good for God hath appointed no Calling to take all and pay nothing but every honor hath a burthen of care going with it As in the Members of the the natural Body not one is allowed to be idle but every one works for the good of the whole the eye looks the tongue talks the foot walks the hand works c. Now some may think that all these work and the stomack and belly in the midst lie still and be idle doing nothing but it s not so for though they work not as the other yet their work is as profitable and necessary without which they could not long stir namely they concoct the meat and nourish the whole body the like may be said of Princes and Magistrates So Ministers even the greatest must stoop low and take care publikely and privately of the meanest in the Congregation He that is chief must thus be servant of all So the chief men in Towns must take care for the good of the poor they must visit them into their poor houses and look in their cupboards c. it s their glory thus to do The Angels tend on us and scorn not yea God stoops to take care of us poor Creatures He numbers the hairs of our heads and makes all our beds in our sickness So our Savior Christ being rich became poor for us and the Holy Ghost takes up us miserable Creatures for his lodging Housholders also as they look for submission from their Families so must they submit themselves to have care not of their bodies only but to instruct teach and admonish them for the good of their souls so Husbands must bear with their Wives weakness and not stand strictly upon every word amiss when they are at sometimes disquieted Neither is it any disparagement for a Superior to yield to his Inferior but a commendation for so did Abraham to Lot let every one know we be the Lords Stewards and therefore must lay out as well as take in For equals There must be a doing good each to other being not born for our selves The useful man is the man that will be beloved and have comfort we may stand in need one of another and therefore must do good one to another also we must yield each to other not as they that will strive for the wall or way and lay each other in the dirt in reasoning we must not be stiff and seek to have the last word in fallings out if our adversary will not come at us we must go to him In matter of commodity if he will not yield an inch we must if he be angry break off be silent or answer mildely c. This is so far from being any disgrace as that its our honor and credit what though we could master and subdue another we are far wiser if we can overcome our selves and subdue our own hearts to the word and will of God This also tends greatly to peace and blessed are the peacemakers without this no peace A flint and steel being the one beat against the other make fire not so if we strike it against a cushion The world thinks shall I yield to him O this great courage to stand out but its carnal and beastly courage of Bulls and Bears not of Christians How many might have saved an infinite deal of trouble and charge yea haply their lives if they would but have yielded a little at first which afterwards they have wished when it was too late Be cloathed with humility He exhorts to another vertue which is the mother and fountain of this submission would you thus submit your selves then be humble whence as we may note that where this submission is not it s for want of humility and pride bears sway which its needful we should take knowledge of that we may the better seek the cure so we may learn That Whatsoever submission proceeds not from humbleness of heart is but dissimulation and hypocrisie as Absolom that behaved himself so lowly to all the people which yet had a most proud heart in him to aspire to the kingdom in his fathers life time So the Pope calls himself Servus servorum Dei when yet he lifts up himself above all makes himself head of the Church to have Supremacy over Princes to set up and cast down at his pleasure c. So the Monks and Fryers that pretend great humility in fasting and punishing themselves which yet proceeds from a proud heart thinking hereby to merit at the hand of God So they that profess voluntary
poverty which yet live in abundance of all things so many among us use low conges and crouches which yet have all ensigns of pride upon them so some that be mean enough in apparel and will speak so lowly and give so much to others even more then is fit and abuse themselves too much which yet do it but in cunning and with a proud heart as may appear by their gibing and jesting at those whom it may be they have thus spoken to and preferred as also their jesting at others whom if you shall stir a little you shall finde them more like Lyons and unappeasable which is the sign of a proud heart yea some will put down themselves too low that all may advance them the more and dispraise themselves to have others set out their commendations The cloathing which is here principally meant is the inward The filthy Soul must be cloathed with the white raiment of Christs Righteousness The soul behang'd with the filthy rags of beastly lusts must be adorned with the sanctifying graces of Gods Spirit The Church is all glorious within Thus must both men and women of all sorts be adorned and herein be paterns unto others Here is not now present any naked body you would be ashamed that there should but I am afraid that there 's here many a naked Soul nay worse even defiled with many noisom lusts of Pride Ignorance Hypocrisie Prophaneness c. In particular the vertue exhorted unto is Humility which hath his place in the heart and sheweth it self outwardly by fruits in the countenance gestures speeches and actions of the life This is a vertue and grace of Gods Spirit whereby a man not out of cunning melancholly carelesness or discontent with himself but from a true knowledge of God himself and others doth with an unfained voluntary free meekness of minde set a low value of his own worth or doth esteem meanly of himself Though the natural man may seem more humble then some Christians yet the proudest Christian hath more humility then the humblest carnal man This is often called for in Scripture and taught by our Savior Christ in the matter of the guests and is also commended much in the Proverbs Besides pride which is opposite to it is continually forbidden and condemned all which are of many commendations of humility To point it out the better see it by the fruits thereof and then by examples The fruits may be considered either in respect of God or men In respect of God 1. It makes a man seeing his own woful state by nature by his guiltiness in Adam by his actual sins also and bondage under sin and all the curses due thereby to renounce and abhor himself and to flee for pardon mercy and deliverance and having nothing at all in himself but wretchedness and deformity to desire to finde all in another which if he do he counteth himself infinitely bound to God for ever as the poor Publican and Prodigal childe the Patriarchs shewed it in sackcloath and ashes This is the first step to Heaven and without which there is no coming to the Kingdom of God 2. It makes a man acknowledge himself unworthy of any of Gods favors as Abraham Jacob Peter with others See Gen. 18. 27. and 32. 10. 2 Sam. 7. 18. Psal. 8. 4 c. 3. It makes a man acknowledge whatsoever good thing he hath to proceed from God and his meer grace and therefore to give God the glory thereof in Thanksgiving See Dan. 2. 27. Act. 3. 12. and 14. 15. 1 Cor. 4. 7. As they in an Hospital they are not ashamed of the Founder thereof but keep the memory of him neither are they fit to receive any thing who will not acknowledge it Nebuchadnezzar was seven years in learning this 4. It makes a man to see his own weakness and frailty his unability to do good and proneness to evil and that he hath no strength to stand one blow in the Spiritual Warfare so that he doth always fear and suspect himself and craves continually of God to be kept from the one and enabled to the other as David Open mine eyes stay my feet in thy ways ●ead me forth forsake me not teach me quicken me c. so that the humble man is full as of thanks so of Prayers 5. It makes a man prest and ready to yield obedience to God seeing both his Soveraignty over us as his poor creatures and then that he hath been so undeservedly merciful Thereupon he saith Speak Lord for thy servant heareth Humility is the mother of Obedience as pride of disobedience therefore we are willed to receive the word with meekness 6. It makes a man if he have done amiss exceedingly grieved and to confess and humble themselves even Ahabs counterfeiting the same did him good 7. It makes a man meekly to bear the hand of the Lord as well in respect of his Soveraignty over us as 1 Sam. 3. 18. 2 Sam 15. 26. Psal. 39. as in respect of our own unworthiness as Mic. 7. 9. knowing that we have deserved a thousand times more and that its of his mercy we are not consumed If we be reproached or wronged by men we will bear it quietly as David being raised upon by Shimei because we know we have deserved to be made a threshold for all to tread on and therefore we will wait patiently on God for deliverance when the proud will withdraw and lift up their mindes and wait no longer or mur●●●● as the 〈◊〉 or blaspheme as those mentioned Rev. 16. or 〈…〉 means as Ahakia and Sa●t If poverty seize on them they will stoop to it and onely use diligence and prayer If their Goods Children Friends be taken away humility will say He hath taken but what he gave or lent me for a season 8. It makes a man that as he dare not curiously pry into the Ark and meddle with things not revealed but to content himself to be ignorant where God hath not spoken so to rest himself satisfied without any further doubting or cav●●ing or enquiring when he knows what is Gods will In respect of men and it s most towards our Equals and Inferiors and is not so much seen in the other namely To our Superiors and there be that will stoop none so much or basely to Superiors that will despise their Inferiors most of all 1. It will make a man prefer others above himself and do as our Savior Christ bids sit down below not dissemblingly but ingenuously so inwardly to esteem others better then our selves knowing our own faults and looking on the vertues of others 2. To be sociable friendly and helpful taking pains to do others the good we can not scorning to be beholding especially to our Inferiors and Equals 3. To submit our selves yield and give way to our Equals yea if need be to our inferiors as Abraham to L●t not
not tell her thereof It makes a man run into many sins into many absurdities and draws on many punishments It disgraceth all good gifts and so stains them as they become unprofitable It makes us uncapable of the grace of God as the hilly ground shuts off the rain therefore those profit not by the Word nor by the Sacraments nor can pray c. This is naturally bred in our hearts and very hardly rooted out it comes much either of abundance or of conceit and opinion of much usually or abundance If any have more Beauty Wit Strength Skill in any Calling Knowledge Gifts Wealth Authority or the like this makes the heart swell in a base or mean condition under affliction or misery to be humble at least in shew is nothing but in abundance of gifts to be humble this is a great grace and rare This is not onely in the common sort and wicked but haunteth even the Servants of God and riseth of the ashes of other sins when we have got the mastery over them and grace and ability to do good duties then pride thrusts in to make us think well of our selves as if we had done them by our own power and so even in our best duties there 's most danger of this Hence it is that the Lord leaves corruptions and infirmities in the hearts of his Children to hold them under Therefore are they so often foiled when they seek themselves most Hence many Christians of good parts are held in a poor estate lest they should wax proud yea if it prove very rank and bear a great stroke in them he lets them fall into some foul sin or some notable disgrace to cure them of pride for desperate diseases must have a desperate cure It s the Devils practice if he can no way else prevail with a man to win him to evil or to live in any sin but that he hath got good gifts and is careful in the use of them then he seeks to blow them up with pride as Enemies when they have long laid Siege to a Town and can by no means win it at last they undermine it and seek to blow it up with Gunpowder 1. Let us examine our selves concerning this sin this may be generally said and too truly that this Land is universally overspread with the same in a fearful maner How is Christ preached and how few imbrace him at least in their hearts and stoop to him How few use the gifts they have to Gods glory as acknowledging they come from him but seek themselves onely using their wealth wit skill c. as they list Universally men obey not nor will stoop to the word of God but do what they list whatsoever God saith How generally do men use unlawful shifts in their crosses what contentions stirs ●usts are between some about places what notorious pride and excess is there in apparel whereby we may justly fear the Lord hath a quarrel against us yea though we are in such a fearful state we think highly of our selves and as if our care had never been better cannot endure to be told that these are dangerous and evil times yea it s dangerous to say that these are dangerous times What measure soever we have of pride it s both dangerous and damnable If men trust to something in themselves if they stoop not to the word if they use unlawful means in their afflictions as good have Ratsbane in their bellies as this pride in their hearts If we be conceited of the good things in us take too much to our selves set too light by others think too well of our own strength lift up our selves above others be contentious censurers such as will bear no reproof proud in our speeches and apparel the least of this will provoke God against us 2. Let us labor to be purged of this deadly sickness The consideration of our matter Dust and Ashes our mortality and frailty that we may be under the clods ere the morrow our sinful state whereby we deserve that curse and all evils our readiness to fall into any evil the glory power justice goodness holiness and purity of God may disswade us from pride O take heed of pride the worm and canker of any grace and that which hinders the good our gifts might do God resisteth A warlike word is up in arms makes open war and professedly sets himself against the proud as the Angel that stood with a sword drawn to resist Balaam in the way See to this purpose Prov. 6. 17. 16. 5. 18. Psal. 119. 21. Luke 1. 52. 14. Reasons This stands in Gods light and robs him of his glory it s not Caesars friend the arch-Traytor Will God suffer himself to be spoiled of his glory by a poor creature God delights to disgrace them that think so highly of themselves and so lift up themselves above others so lest they should do too much hurt for if proud men get wealth and authority there is no hoe This also will be more taken knowledge of then if many inferior ones were cut off and will also prevail more for if God hath crossed and cut off those others will beware God resists them sometimes by taking away that they be proud of wit sending them phrensie beauty sending them deformity gay clothes sending them rags c. Sometimes he makes their pride become them ill and so they be noted and disgraced thereby Sometimes he makes their gifts unprofitable and blasteth them that they dye foils them when they seek themselves most lets them fall into some foul sin and so shames them or crosseth them by some punishment or other c. God will cast dung in their faces and besmear them he delights to disgrace such Call to minde the forementioned Examples of the evil Angels ths Builders of Babel Pharaoh Adonibezek c. and how God set himself against them 1. If we observe any to be very proud do not we envy them but rather pity them for God is their enemy and their destruction cannot be far off 2. As we would avoid destruction let us take heed of pride and labor to be purged of it more and more let us resist it and stamp it down God will not give his graces to those that will rob him of the glory of them If we strive not against this but yield hereto God will either let us fall into some foul sin and so shame our selves to cure us or at least he will thwart us with many crosses which by humility we may avoid And giveth grace to the humble The direct Reason to move us to humility Unto the humble God giveth the gifts of his Spirit temporal deliverances and favors respect among men favor with him self he dwells with such and filleth them with good things This may be shewed in all the properties thereof before mentioned 1. They that be vile and nothing in their own eyes
and be poor mourning sighing hungring c. obtain mercy with God They are fit objects thereof witness the poor Publican will be thankful and do any thing at Gods command 2. Such as acknowledge themselves unworthy of any mercy God honoreth with many as Abraham Jacob the Centurion the woman of Canaan with others 3. They that acknowledge that whatsoever grace or gift they have they have had it of God and refer it to his glory shall have more as he that had gained five Talents He is not worthy to be an Almsman that will not acknowledge the Donor 4. They that acknowledge their own insufficiency and inability to good or resist evil these will pray and God will keep them and give them the grace they want they shall be satisfied as the thirsty ground with rain David prayed to be taught and got more understanding then the Ancients to this end also they will hear read come to the Sacraments c. as knowing the need they have of help and so are holpen 5. They that humbly submit themselves to the obedience of Gods word them he will teach and they shall profit These shall save themselves from many a sin and sorrow which else with David Jonah and Peter they may bring upon themselves 6. When having sinned they humble themselves God is near them to receive them to mercy as to the Prodigal and to turn away evil as from Josiah 7. Them that humble themselves under Gods afflicting hand God graceth with deliverance as David from Saul from Absolom 8. Them that keep themselves humbly within their compass God teacheth and keepeth in their places to do good when others medling with matters above their reach run into some error or heresie and bring shame upon themselves So 9. Them that be humble towards men preferring others before themselves and being low in their own eyes God graceth with favor credit and a good report The Use followeth in the following words Verse 6. Humble your selves therefore under the mighty hand of God that he may exalt you in due time THe Apostle having shewed that Humility is an ornament to be labored for and given a Reason thereof he doth here press the same with an Exhortation teaching both us how to preach and you how to hear We must deliver sound Doctrine prove it strongly by Arguments and Reasons and then urge the practice thereof to the avoiding of evil and performing good else we do nothing People also must thus hear when they know a thing then must they yield to the obedience thereof else all is nothing We must be cast into the mold and shape of the Doctrine delivered we must follow the sample and patern of the Word we must write after our copy though haply we do it not so fairly as were requisite we must be like the eccho that answereth the same sound to the voyce though not perfectly Our lives must in some measure be answerable to the word Humble your selves therefore Humility is the way to Gods grace If in seeing our own vileness and sin we do humble our selves God will have mercy on us Shall not the grace of God allure us which is more worth then the whole world what else will But of this before Under the mighty hand of God Now follow two other Reasons to perswade to humility One from Gods power with whom we have to do the other from the preferment whereunto we shall attain in due time he will exalt us From the 1. The mighty hand of God either to lift us up being humble or cast us down being proud Note that The consideration of Gods Almightiness is a good mean to make us humble See this in Peter at the great draught of fishes Depart from me for I am a sinful man So Abraham I am but dust and ashes So Isaiah Wo is me I am undone c. Hence God gave his Law in such terrible maner and humbled his Servants whom he was to send unto his people with fearful visions so when God would somewhat take down Job he did it by shewing him his power in his creatures Gods hand indeed is mighty that made the world of nothing divided the Red sea opened the earth in sunder made the mountains to tremble and will raise us out of our graves in the last day This ought much to affect us that so we might seek to get into his favor stoop to his Word submit our selves under the cross and be humbled The want of this is the cause of pride and that we do not stoop before the Lord We think because we can make our part good one with another we can do so with God But O potsheard who art thou that strivest with thy maker What is the potsheard to the bar of iron whether it give or take the blow it breaketh into pieces the proudest Gyants have not stood before him when he hath been angry If the Lyon roar the Beasts tremble If a Gyant should take an ordinary man in hand what could he not do would he not fling him against the ground and make the earth to ring so doth God by many a proud man in a year he flings him on his back against the ground and makes all the Countrey ring of the fall O then consider this and humble thy self for thy sins past labor to get into Gods favor stoop to his Word when he speaks yield and bow under his afflicting hand lest he tear thee in pieces whiles there is none to help if his wrath burn but a little Oh Kiss the Son lest he be angry and ye perish in his wrath Little did Pharaoh Nebuchadnezzar and others think God had such a mighty hand Be wise by their harms stoop in time lest he make thee have woful experience of his Almightiness to thy confusion And he will exalt you Namely with grace here and glory hereafter This is the second Reason from which note that Humility is the way to glory This may be shewed in the forementioned properties of humility If a man confess and humble himself in the sight of sins God will exalt him with comfort so will he outwardly advance the humble and dejected Leah being despised God made her fruitful as David from the Ewes to be anointed and after he was humbled under many afflictions God exalted him to the Kingdom in his own time so were Joseph Esther Mordecai exalted so will he exalt to glory in Heaven all his that have humbly walked before him amidst their sorrows and the many afflictions of this life as Lazarus Labor we therefore for humility if we would be indeed exalted In due time Though Gods servants be not always advanced or delivered when they will yet shall they in due time God is not onely able and willing to exalt his humble servants but infinitely wise to know the fittest time He doth all things in due time If
preach to them he writes which would stick to them and whereunto they might resort again and again at their pleasure Hence I might speak of the profitableness of writing Epistles how much good Gods servants may do to each other being absent by Prayers by Letters How much good hath been done by the Letters of the Fathers and of godly men in latter times as of Calvin Beza the Martyrs c. who knoweth not what a fault is it that it s no more used as Parents to their Children being absent friends to friends c. whereas wanton Letters and Letters about worldly businesses are frequent enough Written Thus God moved the hearts of his Servants and assisted them extraordinarily to pen the parts of holy Scripture O what a a benefit it is that we have the whole and most holy Word of God written and before us and how should we in token of thankfulness be exercised therein But most busie their heads with other matters namely Their worldly profits and pleasures fools bables in the mean time little using or regarding the Bible Briefly 1. Because he would have them the oftner in it and take the more delight to read it over 2. Because he sent Silvanus to open and unfold it at large by preaching out of it and making application thereof for their good Here see how God in his infinite wisdom hath provided us his Word wherein is all his minde and that in few words to provoke us to be exercised therein for if the Word had been written as large as we had need for our understanding the world could not have contained the books that must have been written but the Lord hath revealed his will briefly laid down much in few words yet for our further benefit God hath Ordained the Ministery of his Word and given gifts to men to preach it expound it apply it to every bodies use so that both together do most happily How should God have provided better for us If therefore people profit not their answer must be heavy Exhorting and testifying c. These words afford sundry points as 1. In that the Apostle testifieth by sound Arguments that they were in the right way note that Its needful for every one to know and be well assured of the Religion he professeth that it is the truth of God for there be many Religions yet but one truth miss that and perish we must not go by guess in our Religion It s not enough that we have the true Religion except we know it to be so that we be not wavering and carried about with every wind of contrary Doctrine 1. This rebukes those that take occasion because there be so many Religions therefore they will meddle with none but take their ease and tarry till all agree 2. It rebukes those that profess a Religion as all do but know not whether it be truth or not but believe as the Church believes as they be told but have no ground from the Word for the same Turks may not its death to question about their Religion Papists may not especially the Laity who are forbid to read the Bible or any good Book that way but we may yet how do the most in this Land profess the Gospel which by Gods goodness is the truth indeed alas how few know and are able to prove it 3. As it s our duty to testifie and prove our Religion to be the onely true way of Salvation so it s yours to know and acknowledge it that if an Angel should come and inform you otherwise you might not give ear to him 2. In that the Apostle thought it not enough to prove to them that that was the true Religion they were in but exhorted them to continue constant in the same note that They that know the truth ought so highly to esteem it and be so thankful to God for it as they never suffer themselves to be removed therefrom whether for hope of gain or fear of trouble c. we must buy the truth not sell it The Martyrs would rather lose their lives then the truth if we let that go we lose our Souls 3. In that the Apostle takes such care and pains with those Jews that now stood in the truth to hold them therein we may note that Its an hard matter for those to hold out stedfast that have begun to do well for our heart is deceitful the Devil is subtile and strong and there are also many Seducers many baits many discouragements c. What are they then that say there 's too much Preaching and Reading They know nothing that belongs to true Christianity A little means may serve to keep men in a loose carnal and prophane course but to keep us in a good course there must be precept upon precept line upon line c. and all little enough Therefore Ministers ought to continue with all diligence not onely to gain home more but even to hold on and confirm them that be gained that they fall not away into error sin and security and people have also need to use all good means to this end 4. In that his Epistle consisteth in testifying by sound reasons for the confirmation of their judgements and then of the Exhortation for the whetting on of their affections Note That Both parts are necessary in Preaching the one still to accompany the other 1. Ministers therefore must labor in and for both 2. People must make use and account of both regard Doctrine for knowledge and suffer Exhortation for practice Some cannot endure Application and Exhortation but are all for knowledge and to feed the understanding and it appears in their lives for they cannot endure but to live at elbow-room as they list notwithstanding the profession some make in hearing Sermons Verse 13. The Church that is at Babylon elected together with you saluteth you and so doth Marcus my son ANother part of the conclusion consisting of Salutations from the whole company of the faithful with him and particularly from Mark. The Church The company of the faithful that were at Babylon knowing of our Apostles writing to these his dispersed Brethren entreat to be remembred to them and pray the Apostle for he would not send their commendations without their knowledge that he would signifie to them that they remembred them loved and reverenced them and were glad of them praying to God for them c. Gods people though far distant one from another yet must be mindeful one of another Which is at Babylon Namely a City of Assyria whither the Jews were carryed Captive by Nebuchadnezzar and there abode for Seventy years There were here now sundry believing Jews as God hath his Church in the worst places where Satans Throne is and though most of the Jews rejected Christ yet some here and in other Cities embraced him The Papists will needs have this meant of Rome but upon